any advice on good buys? what best kit to buy/fit
im eventually fitting secondary leisure battery but keeping 12v lights
any handy tips and advice please people
also any good links to whr buy
thanks in advance

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LeeME3 wrote:the area you can access behind the rear light cluster. There's a fair bit of room behind that cluster, certainly enough to get your hand in. It is a completely dry area
Contradictory as it may seem, the kind of water you're going to get from that isn't a big issue for a properly fitted blue three-pin socket. They're designed to be IP44-rated - protected against water "splashed from all directions".itchyfeet wrote:appart from the water that comes down the air ventLeeME3 wrote:the area you can access behind the rear light cluster. There's a fair bit of room behind that cluster, certainly enough to get your hand in. It is a completely dry area
dicey wrote:So I have made up this wiring diagram. I have borrowed parts of it from a wiring diagram I found on the net.
I have all the 12V wiring completed already, I just need to finish the mains wiring. My plan is to have a mains rated (coil + contacts) DPDT relay that will switch between power from the inverter, or power from the hookup and feed this to the mains sockets. If anyone sees anything stupid in the diagram, let me know so I can correct before I wire up.
AdrianC wrote: I wouldn't bother with the inverter, tbh - and, if I did, I'd probably just do separate sockets. Or, for simplicity, just have separate sockets from the inverter so that you know you're working off the different (finite) source. 12v -> mains is inefficient, and only tempts you to use high powered equipment that'll flatten the battery in short order.
AdrianC wrote:
I wouldn't bother with the inverter, tbh - and, if I did, I'd probably just do separate sockets. Or, for simplicity, just have separate sockets from the inverter so that you know you're working off the different (finite) source. 12v -> mains is inefficient, and only tempts you to use high powered equipment that'll flatten the battery in short order.
But, with that included, all looks good to me.
I think the problem will be if you're on hook-up in some campsite and the campsite power goes down - your system will quietly switch to running through the inverter and you'll be none the wiser, and your leisure battery will be quickly emptying itself!!!dicey wrote:I had considered not bothering with an inverter, but for the rare occasion I might need one, Id like it to be there. The Inverter I have is a weedy 200W cheapo which I didnt pay for, so I want to make use of it, but have it stored away out of sight.
MidLifeCrisis wrote: I think the problem will be if you're on hook-up in some campsite and the campsite power goes down - your system will quietly switch to running through the inverter and you'll be none the wiser, and your leisure battery will be quickly emptying itself!!!
Also, looking at your diagram - is that inverter going to be powered up all the time? I'd assume that there would be some current draw even when it's not supplying 240v so it would slowly drain your leisure battery; at the least I'd add a big on/off switch somewhere in your eyeline (preferably with a big red light on it!!) so you know when it's being used!!