Series:
01 — 12V vs 120V 02 — Shore Power, Batteries & Converter 03 — Water Systems 04 — Tanks 05 — Leveling Systems

The Simple Way to Think About It

Here's the way I explain it on service calls when an owner has never thought about this before:

120 volts is the brawn. 12 volts is the brain.

The 120-volt system is the heavy-duty power — the muscle behind your big appliances. The air conditioner, the microwave, the electric water heater. These are high-draw devices that need household-level current to run.

The 12-volt system is what actually operates your RV. It's the control side — the lights, the slides, the leveling jacks, the furnace, the water pump, the vent fans. Almost everything that makes your RV function day-to-day runs on 12 volts.

Both systems are running at the same time. They're separate, they work differently, and when one has a problem the symptoms can look completely unrelated to the cause. That's why understanding both is the starting point for any electrical diagnosis.

120 Volt System

The Brawn

Same current as your home — heavy duty power

This is the high-draw side. It runs the appliances that need serious power — your rooftop air conditioner, microwave, electric heat strip, and wall outlets.

It comes from the campground pedestal when you're plugged in, from a generator when you're not, or from an inverter if your rig has one. Without one of those three sources, your 120-volt side has nothing.

12 Volt System

The Brain

Same as your truck battery — controls everything

This is the operating side. It runs the systems that make your RV work — lights, slide motors, leveling jacks, furnace blower, water pump, vent fans, and most of your control panels.

It comes from your batteries. When you're plugged in, your converter keeps the batteries charged and feeds this system at the same time. Without 12 volts, your RV doesn't operate — even if you're fully plugged in at a campsite.

Field Reality

Most owners think about their RV power as one thing. The moment you start thinking about it as two separate systems — each with its own source, its own loads, and its own failure points — electrical problems start making a lot more sense.

What Actually Runs on Each System

Once you know which system powers which appliance, you can start narrowing down problems immediately. Microwave dead but lights work? That tells you something specific. Lights out but outlets fine? That tells you something completely different.

120V — The Brawn
  • Rooftop air conditioner
  • Microwave
  • Electric water heater element
  • Electric heat strip
  • Wall outlets (standard)
  • Residential refrigerator (if equipped)
  • Washer / dryer (if equipped)
  • Converter / battery charger
12V — The Brain
  • Interior lights (most)
  • Slide room motors
  • Leveling jacks
  • Water pump
  • Furnace blower fan
  • Vent fans
  • Control panels & displays
  • Awning motor
  • Propane detector
  • Stereo / entertainment
  • Tank monitor panel
Diagnostic Shortcut

When something stops working, ask yourself: is it a high-draw appliance or a system that operates the RV? That one question points you to the right side of the electrical system immediately — and cuts your diagnosis time in half.

The Part That Surprises Almost Everyone

This is the thing I find myself explaining constantly on service calls: gas appliances still need 12 volts to operate.

Most owners assume that if something runs on propane, electricity isn't involved. That's not how it works. Propane provides the heat — but 12-volt power runs the controls, the igniter, the sensors, and the safety systems that allow the appliance to function at all.

The Part Nobody Expects

Your Propane Appliances Need 12V to Run

Your propane furnace has a blower motor, an igniter, a sail switch, and a control board — all of which run on 12 volts. No 12V power, no furnace. Doesn't matter how much propane is in the tank.

Your propane water heater needs 12V for the ignition sequence, the gas valve solenoid, and the control board. Same story.

Your absorption refrigerator — the kind that runs on both propane and electric — needs 12V for its control board regardless of which heat source it's using.

A dead battery means no furnace, no water heater, no fridge. Even with a full propane tank and shore power connected.

Field Note

I've been on more service calls than I can count where an owner had "no heat" and was convinced something was wrong with the furnace. The furnace was fine. The battery was dead, the 12V fuse was blown, or the battery disconnect was off. Once 12V power was restored, everything worked perfectly. Always check the simple stuff first.

What You Lose When 12V Fails — Even on Shore Power

This is something that genuinely shocks most owners: you can be fully plugged into campground power and still lose the ability to operate your RV if the 12-volt side fails.

Shore power keeps your 120-volt appliances running and feeds your converter. But if the 12-volt system goes down — dead batteries, blown main fuse, failed converter, battery disconnect left off — here's what stops working immediately:

💡
Interior Lights
Most RV lighting runs on 12V — not the wall outlets
🌀
Vent Fans
Roof vents and bathroom fans are all 12V powered
🔥
Furnace
Blower, igniter, and controls all need 12V — propane alone won't help
🚿
Water Heater
Gas valve and control board need 12V to operate
❄️
Refrigerator
Control board runs on 12V regardless of heat source
💧
Water Pump
Entirely 12V powered — no 12V means no water from the tank

Your air conditioner and microwave might still run — they're on the 120V side. But your ability to actually live in and operate the RV is gone.

Key Takeaway

Shore power does not replace your 12-volt system. It feeds your converter, which maintains that system. If anything breaks that chain — dead battery, failed converter, blown fuse — the 12-volt side goes down regardless of what's plugged in outside.


Pro Member Content

Go Deeper — Circuits, Fuses & Tracing Problems

The free section gives you the foundation. Pro members get the hands-on detail that helps you actually find and fix electrical problems instead of just understanding them.

How to read your RV fuse panel
12V circuit layout and common fuse locations
How to trace which circuit controls what
Using a multimeter to test voltage and continuity
How to check battery voltage and what the numbers mean
Testing converter output at the fuse panel
Common wiring problems and how they present
Ground faults — what they are and how to find them
Join Pro — Get Full Access
Next Lesson — 02
Shore Power, Batteries & Your Converter