Alain, You are confusing the 120v wiring with the 12 volt wiring. That outlet is for running the fridge off shore power. On 12v the fridge has a relay under the driver's seat that only allows it to run when the engine is running. You need to hook up a 12v charger of sufficient capacity to run your 12v items, and you could use this outlet to plug it in. Most folks install an isolated second battery and power the often used 12v items from it. Your charger can charge both batteries and run your 12v stuff as long as it's powerful enough. The EVC had all this, the Westy does not. Stuart (I've owned both too, and also sold my '97 EVC money pit and bought an '85 Westy) -----Original Message----- From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of Alain Thibault Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 1:19 PM To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM Subject: Re: Camper question Thanks for your help, however there is only one plug where the fridge is plugged in my 1986 and it is used by the fridge. If I were to unplug the fridge or use a double plug adaptor and use that plug if I understand properly, I would need to buy a charger and run a wire to the coach battery so that the coach battery gets charged? Sent from my iPhone > On 2013-12-30, at 10:17, Dug Smith <dug@dugbert.com> wrote: > > Hi Alain, > >> On 12/30/2013 10:09 AM, Alain Thibault wrote: >> Sorry for the crazy question...just sold my 1993 Westfalia Eurovan and bought a 1986 Westfalia. On the Eurovan Westy (Canadian model) when it was plugged, lights , fridge, aux.heater fan, and all the camper equipment, would be running off the offshore current, not the coach battery, but It would also charge the battery when plugged. My question: with the 1986, my understanding is that when plugged the coach battery does not get charged, and the electrical camper parts like the lights ( except for the fridge, etc) are still running off the coach battery not the offshore current... Is my understanding correct? >> Thanks again >> Alain > > The Vanagon doesn't have an onboard charger, but there is a spare socket under the sink (next to where the fridge plugs in) that you can use to plug a charger in. I have a marine charger that charges both batteries when shore power is plugged in :o) > > toodle pip, > -- > Dug Smith | Terry Pratchett: It's almost > (mailto:dug@dugbert.com) | impossible to ride a rock and roll > (http://www.dugbert.com) | motorbike and stay on for three verses. |
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