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Colan Arnold's avatar

Ground and hot skin, if I understand what I’ve read hot skin requires two things: a current leak to chassis/ground/skin and an improper or missing ground.

I’m trying to reconcile the above with a condition I ran into a campground. Underneath a TT roll up against the axle, I’m covered in sweat, ground is damp and I feel an electric tingle. Start to try to find the problem when a neighbor walks over and says every RV in the area has a low level of hot skin. Shoved one probe of the voltmeter in the dirt and touched the frame with the other probe. Did this on five or six RVs all showed 10 to 12 volts.

Any thoughts?

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Jay Sigel's avatar

Another potential topic for discussion would be cord winders. They have brushes. In a prior motorhome, I experienced neutral failures in 2 of its cord winders resulting in damage to a TV, a satellite receiver and the ATS. The insulation on the neutral wire from the winder got charred. After the cord winder was removed, there were no more electrical problems. The wonders were replaced under warranty but the shop blamed the failures on power durges although an external surge protector was always used and the winder was never rotated after plugging into the pedestal.

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