Three things your RV depends on every time you plug in. Most owners only really understand one of them. This lesson breaks down where your power actually comes from, what each component does, and why they all need each other — even if you always camp with hookups.
This is the most common source of confusion I see on service calls. An owner says "I have no power" — but what they usually mean is that one of several power sources isn't doing what they expect. Before you can diagnose anything electrical, you need to understand that your RV runs on two different electrical systems at the same time.
Those two systems are your 120-volt AC system — the same household current you get from a wall outlet — and your 12-volt DC system, the same type of power your truck battery uses. If those aren't clear to you yet, go back and read Lesson 01 first. It'll make this one a lot easier to follow.
What this lesson covers is the three things that feed, store, and move that power through your RV: shore power, your batteries, and your converter. Understanding what each one does — and what it doesn't — is how you start diagnosing electrical problems correctly instead of guessing.
Most owners think of their power as one thing — either they have it or they don't. In reality it's two separate systems fed by multiple sources. The problem almost never comes from where people look first.
Shore power is the 120-volt AC electricity you pull from the campground pedestal — or your house, or a generator — through the cord plugged into the side of your RV. When it enters your rig it goes one of two routes depending on how yours is set up.
If you have a transfer switch: power goes there first, then gets directed to your main breaker panel. The transfer switch is what lets your RV switch between shore power and a generator automatically.
If you don't have a transfer switch: power runs directly to your main breaker panel.
Either way, the end result is the same — your breaker panel gets power, which feeds your 120-volt circuits and your converter.
Corrosion and loose connections cause more electrical problems than most owners ever suspect — and they're almost never the first thing anyone checks. A corroded shore power inlet, a loose connection at the converter, or a bad ground can create symptoms that look like major system failures. I've been on calls where the owner was convinced they needed a new converter. The real problem was a corroded connection at the power inlet. Always check the obvious stuff first before assuming something expensive is wrong.
This is the most confused topic in RV electrical. Most owners have heard both words. Very few actually know what each one does — and mixing them up makes it impossible to diagnose problems correctly.
Here's the short version: they do opposite jobs.
Takes the 120-volt shore power coming into your RV and converts it down to 12-volt DC power. This is what runs your 12-volt system — lights, slides, furnace fan, water pump — while you're plugged in. It also charges your batteries at the same time.
Almost every RV has one. It's standard equipment. You may not know where it is, but it's in there — either as a standalone unit or built right into your main distribution center.
Does the opposite — takes 12-volt battery power and converts it up to 120-volt AC. This is what lets you run AC-powered devices (TV, microwave, outlets) when you're not plugged in. It runs entirely off your batteries.
Not standard on most RVs — it's an upgrade. Some newer units come with one. Inverter/charger combo units can also charge your batteries when shore power is available, so they work in both directions.
Some rigs have an inverter/charger combo — a single device that can invert battery power to 120V and charge the batteries when plugged in. Common in higher-end rigs and popular for off-grid setups. If yours has one, it works as both depending on your situation.
Batteries confuse owners more than almost anything else — not because they're complicated, but because nobody explains them from a practical standpoint. What type do you need? How many? What's actually the difference?
Here's how I explain it on service calls: the right battery setup depends entirely on how you actually use your RV. There's no single right answer — but there are clear guidelines based on your situation.
The traditional RV battery. Requires periodic water checks and proper ventilation. Affordable and widely available. Needs to stay upright.
Sealed, no watering required, can be mounted in various orientations. More vibration-resistant. Common factory install in newer units. Group 24 and Group 27 are the most popular sizes.
Wired in series pairs to produce a 12V system. More usable capacity and better cycle life for repeated deep discharge. The go-to for serious off-grid use paired with solar.
Lighter, more usable capacity, faster charge, longer lifespan. Requires a compatible charging system and has specific requirements. Not a simple drop-in swap for most setups.
Lithium has real advantages — but it's also where I see owners get into the most trouble by assuming it's a straightforward upgrade. Lithium requires a compatible converter/charger, a battery management system, and in some cases solar charge controller changes. If you're considering lithium, verify your charging system is compatible before you spend a dime. Specific guidance on lithium charging requirements is in the Pro section below.
The free section gives you the foundation. Pro members get the field-tested detail that helps you make real decisions and diagnose actual problems.
Join Pro — Get Full AccessWaking up to dead or low batteries is one of the most frustrating problems on an RV. Something is drawing current when nothing should be on. Pro members get the systematic process to find it.
Join Pro — Battery Drain DiagnosticHere's something I see confuse owners constantly: they think that because they're always plugged in, their batteries barely matter. Or they think that because they camp off-grid, the shore power side doesn't apply to them. Neither is true.
These two systems are interdependent. Your 12-volt system needs the converter to run properly when you're plugged in, and it needs the batteries when you're not. Your batteries need the converter — or solar, or a generator — to stay charged. Shore power feeds the converter, which feeds the 12-volt side, which runs more of your RV than most people realize.
When one side of this has a problem — a bad connection, a failing battery, a weak converter — the symptoms often show up somewhere else entirely. That's why chasing electrical problems without understanding how the systems connect usually sends owners in completely the wrong direction.
Electrical diagnostics start with understanding which system the symptom belongs to, where power enters that system, and what connects the two sides. If you can answer those three questions, you're already thinking like a technician.