Oh yeah, but an un-resolved recall might cause problems if I ever decide to sell it...at any rate, I looked inside the compartment and traced a few wires, did some testing.
Turns out the fridge circuit for ONLY the fridge electronic and control is connected with a crimp to a separate heavy green wire coming from the converter box, and protected with a 30 A fuse. But the printed fuse diagram shows a 15A fuse in that slot, NOT a 30A fuse.
As far as I can tell, nothing else is on that wire. My r-pod is a 171 with no slide, so maybe the 'repair' for mine is simpler....insert the correct fuse. (can I be that lucky? dunno)
I swapped in a 20A fuse and did some more testing...no issues. I will let it run this way, testing out things, then swap in a 15A and see what happens.
Since the recall notice mentions the 'fridge ignitor' I thought that they might possibly be referring to the 12vdc heater element...(which is protected with a 15A self-resetting 12vdc breaker) ..yes, I know that's not an 'ignitor'..the LP ignitor is the ignitor, but that ignitor is wired and controlled thru the fridge eyebrow board.
But reading thru the online documentation AND the letter I received, it is a bit unclear. The recall notices use the term '30A breaker' in some places, and use the term '30A circuit' in other places, and we know that the ignitor and control boards run on 12VDC, and are protected with FUSES. Besides, the only 'breaker' (for 120v) in the converter panel that controls the 120v fridge element is on a 15A breaker...I verified this.
I have also verified the 12v fridge heater IS on it's own separate 15 A 12vdc self-resetting breaker. I know this because the first one failed (the plastic housing broke) and I replaced it with a new 15A breaker.
The person I talked to said that their notice will have detailed information about the 'repair'....if only I knew if that notice advised the tech to change that one 30A fuse to the correct 15A fuse (as marked) and send the owner on their merry way.