Convertidores de potencia para vehículos recreativos

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88 productos

WFCO WF-8975-MBA 75 Amp Main Board Assembly - Internal Circuit Board View | United RV Parts
Ahorre $210.00
WFCO WF-8930/50NPB Distribution Panel - Front View Closed | United RV Parts
Ahorre $40.00
WFCO T-30 30 Amp Transfer Switch - 3/4 View with Specification Label | United RV Parts
Ahorre $30.28
Black WFCO T-57-R 50 Amp Transfer Switch - Front Angle View | United RV Parts
Ahorre $88.52
Galvanized Steel Parallax ATS503 50 Amp Transfer Switch - Front Angle View | United RV Parts
Ahorre $250.00
Parallax 8355 Power Center Converter - Front View with Door Open | United RV Parts
Ahorre $160.00
Parallax 8355 Power Center Converter - Front View with Door Open | United RV Parts
Ahorre $200.00
Parallax 5355 Power Center Converter - Open Door View with Fuse Block | United RV Parts
Ahorre $200.00

The power converter is one of the most important components in your RV's electrical system. It takes 120V AC shore power and converts it to 12V DC to run your lights, slides, water pump, and other 12-volt systems, while also keeping your battery charged. When a converter fails, you'll typically notice dimming lights, a battery that won't hold a charge, or 12-volt accessories that stop working.

Our selection covers a wide range of amperage ratings, from 25 amp units suited to smaller rigs all the way up to 100 amp converters for larger coaches with higher power demands. We carry trusted brands including WFCO, POWERMAX, Parallax, and Progressive Dynamics. Use the amperage subcategories to find the right match for your setup.

Guía completa para elegir el convertidor de potencia perfecto para su RV

Seleccionar el convertidor de energía para RV adecuado es similar a elegir el corazón de su casa móvil, y aquí tiene una guía completa para que tomar esa decisión sea muy fácil.

What does an RV power converter do?

An RV power converter takes 120-volt AC shore power and converts it to 12-volt DC, which is what runs your interior lights, water pump, furnace fan, slide-out motors, and most 12V accessories. It also keeps your house battery bank charged while you are plugged into shore power or running a generator. When a converter fails, you typically see dimming lights, a battery that will not hold a charge, or 12V accessories that quit working. Pair a healthy converter with clean DC accessories like RV back up cameras and your low-draw lighting circuits will run without flicker.

How do I know what amp converter I need for my RV?

Match the converter to your DC load, not your shore power cord. A 30 amp or 50 amp shore service describes AC input; the converter is rated by DC output amps (commonly 45A, 55A, 75A, or 90A). Add up the 12V loads you run at once (furnace blower around 8A, slide motor 15-25A, lights, fans, water pump 6-8A) plus charging current for your battery bank. A small travel trailer is usually fine with a 45-55A unit; a fifth wheel with multiple slides and a larger battery bank typically needs 75-90A. Confirm the physical footprint and wiring before ordering, since replacement converters often drop into the same distribution panel as the original.

Can I replace just the converter section instead of the whole power center?

Yes, in most cases. Brands like WFCO, Progressive Dynamics, and Parallax build the converter as a removable module that slides out of the power distribution panel while leaving the AC and DC breaker sections in place. This is the fastest and least expensive way to fix a dead converter, no rewiring of the breaker panel required. Confirm your power center model number stamped inside the door before ordering a replacement deck so the connectors and bracket line up. While you are inside the bay, it is a good time to check related items like the Dometic furnace accessories that share the same 12V circuits.

What is the AC04W converter and what does it replace?

The AC04W is a 55-amp WFCO replacement deck used in many WF-8900 and WF-8955 series power centers. It is a drop-in upgrade with three-stage smart charging (bulk, absorption, float) that brings older single-stage converters up to current charging standards for both flooded lead acid and AGM batteries. Verify the model number on your existing power center and the cutout dimensions before ordering. If you are not sure which deck fits, text or call our team at 817-984-1852 with your power center model and we will confirm fitment.

Why is my RV converter not charging the battery?

The three most common causes are a blown DC fuse on the converter output, a failed cooling fan that has caused the unit to thermally shut down, or worn internal components after years of use. Start by checking the 30-40A automotive-style fuses on the front of the converter deck, then listen for the fan when shore power is connected. If the fan is silent and the fuses are good, the converter section itself has usually failed and needs replacement. A failing converter can also be confused with a bad battery, so test battery voltage at the posts with shore power disconnected before deciding which to replace.

Does the converter work when I am running on the generator?

Yes. The converter cannot tell the difference between shore power and generator power, both feed 120V AC into the same input. As long as your generator produces clean 120V at 60Hz, the converter will charge the batteries and run 12V loads the same way it does on shore power. This is how boondockers top off their battery bank during a short generator run. If you are upgrading your boondocking setup, look at related 12V systems like RV back up cameras and other low-draw accessories that benefit from steady DC voltage.