12 Volt Lighting Fixtures For Rvs

You are here: Home > RV Lighting > Interior Lights Below 7 (19)7 to 12.99 (23)13 to 20.99 (23)21 to 27.99 (21)28 and Above (49) AP Products (9)Diamond Group (7)Fasteners Unlimited (1)Gustafson (14)ITC (43)Itc Incorp. Kaper II (1)Ming's Mark (21)Mr Beams (3)Progressive Dynamics (14)RV Designer (1)Thin Lite (7)Thin-Lite (6)Tri Linx (2)TRI-LYNX CORP (1) RV Interior Lights & Interior Lighting Fixtures RV owners take pride in the interior of their motorhomes. After all, you’re spending a great deal of time on the road so it’s important you feel comfortable and at home with your surroundings. Decorate the interior of your RV with decorative interior lighting fixtures including art deco style fixtures and classic brass wall lights. has LED interior lights that will give you a boost in both light and efficiency. Be sure to check out our LED RV lighting page for our entire selection of indoor and outdoor LED camper lights. If you have questions about our selection of our interior light selection, please don’t hesitate to
call and speak with one of our RV parts experts. We are always happy to help with your order and answer any questions you have! Interior RV Lighting Related Articles9/9/2015 - Create Your Perfect RV! 5/12/2015 - Interior RV Lighting for Nearly Any Purpose 1/7/2015 - Mr Beams LED Anywhere Ceiling Light 12/16/2014 - Have these Motorhome Supplies on Hand in Case of an EmergencyAmerican Brittany Puppies For Sale WashingtonUsing LED’s as a light source is a no brainer! Used Beetle Cat Boats For SaleLED’s boast 40-50x’s the burn time, 1/10th the power usage and little to no heat emissions. Neutral Running Shoes MeaningDespite all these benefits LED’s can cost up to 30x’s more per bulb. In the long run LED’s pay for themselves but the initial investment can be substantial depending on the space you need to light.
There are several options when it comes to installing LED’s into your RV: LED fixtures & light bars and bulbs. The Land Yacht had 6 existing light fixtures that use 18 small incandescent bulbs. We wanted to utilize these existing fixtures so we began looking into LED bulbs that are made for these 12v sockets. We quickly found that these 12v LED bulbs are not cheap! At almost $19 per bulb it would cost us over $340 to convert all our lights to LED. (Compare this to .60 per incandescent bulb!) So we began looking for different, cheaper, LED options… I had heard good things about LED lights from ebay. And at a fraction of the cost I decided to give them a try. While much cheaper (around $5 per bulb) their brightness and color are not ideal and they do not come with any warranty. Once the light diffuser is installed the ebay LED are pretty dim and the color is a cool blue and I much prefer a warmer hue. I’ve seen some very affordable 12v RV bulbs on AMAZON with good reviews.
At $11.95 for two its comparable to my ebay buy but look to be a warmer hue and better quality. When looking for 12v bulbs be sure to know what type of socket you need as there is a handful of options out there. The easiest way to get LED’s into your space is simply adding LED bulbs to your existing fixtures. At a trip to IKEA I found these under the counter LED lights called DIODER. For $29 the kit came with 4 little LED fixtures (9 LED’s per fixtures), mounting hardware, wire and switch. As with most appliances the DIODER had a transformer that converts the AC current to DC. Since travel trailers are made to run on 12v this meant I could hack off the transformer and wire the LED lights directly into the trailers 12v system. All the trailer lights run on 12v DC power – even while connected to AC shore power. The AC power goes to a power converter that transforms the AC current to DC to run lights, water pump and maintain a charge on your battery. Since we plan to be primarily off-grid without AC power hookups keeping everything on a 12v system makes the most sense.
Installing the LED’s is pretty simple. Select the place you want them installed (we installed them under all our cabinets), cut off the AC transformer then wire them into the trailer 12v power. Our trailer had 12v power lines run to all the different parts of the trailer we wanted to install the lights. (These 12v power lines were feeding other lights, range vent fan and the heater thermostat.) In our trailer some of the 12v power lines are white wire and others are black. This was a bit confusing because all the AC power lines are white. So I used a power meter to test the lines to verify they were 12v DC. For our trailer black was positive and white was negative. If you’re not sure whether the wire you are dealing with is AC or DC start with the AC setting on your meter…if the reading is a decimal and jumps around then you’re probably dealing with DC power. You should get a reading of between 12-13.5v DC. On the actual lights you will need to determine which wire is positive and which is negative.
(Note: THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT! DO NOT use trial and error to find the positive and negative…this WILL fry your LED!) The IKEA DIODER wire has writing on the positive wire. If you want to double check this you can take apart the transformer and on the output side of the circuit board it will say 12v+ & GND. Follow 12v+ wire into the junction box then you can see which wire is positive that plugs into the box. On all of my lights positive was the wire with writing on it. You can either install the lights with an adhesive pad or screws (both included). The LED twist counter clockwise from the silver mounting brackets. To install with screws drill a hole for your wire, screw down the silver mounting bracket then twist in the LED. For a simple, temporary solution, you can use the switch that comes with the light kit. Hack off both ends and strip the wire. Using wire nuts connect the negative and positive to one end of the switch. Use your power meter to verify the +/- wires when you turn the switch on.