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popularphoinix | Staff posted Today 03:00 PM
popularphoinix | Staff posted Today 03:00 PM

$5.48 | Camco PowerGrip 30AM/15AF Camper/RV Electrical Adapter at Amazon

$5.48

$9.99

45% off
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Amazon [amazon.com] has Camco PowerGrip 30AM/15AF Camper/RV Electrical Adapter for $5.48.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Price
$4.51 lower (45% savings) than the list price of $9.99
$8.20 lower (60% savings) than the previous price of $13.68

Customer reviews
4.8⭐ / 5,056
600+ bought in past month

amazon.com/dp/B00192QB3I [amazon.com]

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Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon [amazon.com] has Camco PowerGrip 30AM/15AF Camper/RV Electrical Adapter for $5.48.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Price
$4.51 lower (45% savings) than the list price of $9.99
$8.20 lower (60% savings) than the previous price of $13.68

Customer reviews
4.8⭐ / 5,056
600+ bought in past month

amazon.com/dp/B00192QB3I [amazon.com]

Please report the deal if expired
My other deals

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+6
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Model: Camco PowerGrip 30AM/15AF Camper/RV Electrical Adapter | Features 30-Amp Male & 15-Amp Female Connections | Designed w/Non-Slip Grooves & Contoured Ends for Easy Removal | Rated for 125V/1875W (55233)

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 3/20/2026, 08:32 PM
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Today 05:23 PM
558 Posts
Joined Aug 2017
PuckS9852Today 05:23 PM
558 Posts
This technically violates national electric code, but it will work and is probably handy
Pro
Today 06:02 PM
14,887 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
sarcasmogratis
Pro
Today 06:02 PM
14,887 Posts
Quote from PuckS9852 :
This technically violates national electric code, but it will work and is probably handy
I'm no electrician, what's the concern here?
I thought usually you could decrease/downgrade capacity but not ever upgrade. At most a 15A pull from a 30A source seems pretty safe?
Today 07:52 PM
91 Posts
Joined Oct 2015
djmt99Today 07:52 PM
91 Posts
Quote from sarcasmogratis :
I'm no electrician, what's the concern here? I thought usually you could decrease/downgrade capacity but not ever upgrade. At most a 15A pull from a 30A source seems pretty safe?
It's a 15A receptacle. So when the Edison plug draws 15A+, it will melt or potentially catch fire. The only protection is the 30A breaker on the other side.
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Today 07:59 PM
14,887 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
sarcasmogratis
Pro
Today 07:59 PM
14,887 Posts
Quote from djmt99 :
It's a 15A receptacle. So when the Edison plug draws 15A+, it will melt or potentially catch fire. The only protection is the 30A breaker on the other side.
Is it just a difference in too much magnitude? Bc there are 20A outlets that accept both 15A & 20A plugs, so again a 15A rated cord could potentially draw 20A
Today 08:03 PM
91 Posts
Joined Oct 2015
djmt99Today 08:03 PM
91 Posts
Quote from sarcasmogratis :
Is it just a difference in too much magnitude? Bc there are 20A outlets that accept both 15A & 20A plugs, so again a 15A rated cord could potentially draw 20A
If properly configured, a 20A cord end has a horizontal blade and a vertical blade. The outlets have a combo H/V to accept both 15A & 20A. Those would have the max rated breaker to prevent over-current.

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