You can charge the camping battery while driving or connect the van to an external power source. To do this, you must connect the supplied cable (20 metres long) from the plug on the driver's side of the camper to a power source. Please note that campers cannot be charged at the stations for electric vehicles.
- Please note the following:
Don't forget to unplug the power cable before driving off! To do this, press down the blue lever to the left of the plug. - With a fully charged battery, you will be self-sufficient for about 2 days without a power connection. Then you will need to drive again for a while to recharge the battery or connect your camper to an external power source.
You can see whether external power is connected at the top left of the camper unit. You can also check the charge level of the camper battery by pressing the "Check" button at the bottom left. The battery level lights up as you press.
Click here to go directly to the explanatory video:
- Video to follow -
Troubleshooting
If you have problems with the power in the living area, please check
- Whether the camper unit is switched on. If not, switch on the device above the sliding door. A green light indicates that it is switched on.
Please note that the 230V sockets can only be used if they are connected to an external power supply! Without an external power supply, only 12V (USB and 12V sockets, lighting) can be used. - Also check the battery level of the camping battery (see picture above).
- If there is no power at all in the camper, check the main fuse of the camping battery.
The electrical unit (with fuses, RCD and main battery switch) is located behind a wooden flap on the left-hand side of the boot. Carefully remove the flap from its holder by pulling it towards you. - Check whether the main battery switch is switched on. It disconnects the camping battery from all power.
- If there is still no power, check the large red main fuse:
When connected to the external power supply
The motorhome indicates that the battery is being charged via external power by a light on the top left (see picture above).
- If you are connected to the external power supply (230V) and have problems, check whether the RCD or another of the 230V fuses has blown. They must be flipped up for them to work.
You will also find them behind the wooden flap on the left-hand side of the boot: - If everything is OK, check if the cable or socket at the other end (which is plugged in at the campsite) is faulty. Maybe a nice fellow camper will let you check with his cable and working socket?
You can charge the camping battery while driving or connect the van to an external power source. To do this, you must connect the supplied cable (20 metres long) from the plug on the driver's side of the camper to a power source. Please note that campers cannot be charged at the stations for electric vehicles.
- Please note the following:
Don't forget to unplug the power cable before driving off! To do this, press down the blue lever to the left of the plug. - With a fully charged battery, you will be self-sufficient for about 2 days without a power connection. Then you will need to drive again for a while to recharge the battery or connect your camper to an external power source.
The lamp with the plug symbol shows you whether external power is connected. You can also check the charge level of the camping battery by pressing the button marked on the left. The battery level lights up while you press the button.
Click here to go directly to the explanatory video:
- Video to follow -
Troubleshooting
If you have problems with the power in the living area, please check
- Whether the camper unit is switched on. If not, switch on the device above the sliding door. A green light indicates that it is switched on.
Please note that the 230V sockets can only be used if they are connected to an external power supply! Without an external power supply, only 12V (USB and 12V sockets, lighting) can be used. - Also check the battery level of the camping battery (see picture above).
- If there is no power at all in the camper, check the main fuse of the camping battery.
The electrical unit (with fuses, residual current circuit breaker) is located behind a wooden flap on the left side under the slatted frame. - If there is still no power, check the large red main fuse (left side of the trunk):
When connected to the external power supply
The motorhome indicates that the battery is being charged via external power by a light on the top left (see picture above).
- If you are connected to the external power supply (230V) and have problems, check whether the RCD or another of the 230V fuses has blown. They must be flipped up for them to work.
You will also find them behind the wooden flap on the left side under the slatted frame: - If everything is OK, check if the cable or socket at the other end (which is plugged in at the campsite) is faulty. Maybe a nice fellow camper will let you check with his cable and working socket?
Before any fuse is pulled, following safety measures is required:
- Turn off the engine and remove the key from the contact.
- Unplug the car from any external power supply.
- Pull carefully on the fuse by pulling from the sides.
- A damaged fuse can be burnt or have the connector broken (see picture). If so, please replace it. You can find them at petrol stations and hardware stores.
Please note the following:
- When stationary, do not charge any device in the driver's cab via USB. The starter battery will discharge and the engine may not start!
- 230V sockets: only work with an external power connection
- USB ports and 12V sockets: work without an external power connection, with a charged camping battery (always keep it above 50% or 12V).
- With a full battery, you can be self-sufficient for 1-2 days without a power connection, depending on usage. Then you need to drive for a while to recharge the battery or connect your camper to an external power source.
- 🚗 Slow driving & short distances → hardly any battery charge
- 🛣️ Long drives on motorways → better charge, but takes several hours
- 🔋 The starter battery is charged first, then the camping battery.
- ⚠️ Driving alone is often not enough to fully charge the camping battery.
- 🔌 Recommendation: charge externally every 48 hours to avoid energy shortages (especially at night 💤).
- Don't forget to unplug the power cable before driving off! For some models, you need to press the blue lever next to the plug downwards.
For deeply discharged camping batteries
As camping batteries are not lithium batteries, we advise you never to discharge them below 30%. This can damage the battery. If you suspect that the camping battery is deeply discharged, try the following:
- Connect shore power and run the engine.
- Try this for about 30 minutes. The extra amperage can bring a deeply discharged battery back up to speed.