I have owned a Tab 400 for a year now, put 13,000 miles on it, and used it off and on for about two months of total travel. During that time, I too experienced the control panel ceasing to work, and had to replace the glass fuses on top of the Alde unit—primarily the one on the negative 12V side—four times, until I fixed the problem.
Before elaborating on the fix, I would like to say thank you to Photomom, for this:
Reliable source for Alde fuses
Photomom Posts: 2,001Member
July 2016 in Heating/Plumbing & Winterizing
I used her source and received my 10 hard-to-find 3.15A fuses promptly and inexpensively.
Second, I want to point out the thread started by TerryV6:
Running a ground from the Alde to the battery
discussion by TerryV6 · September 2017 · Battery/Electrical & Solar
This thread is very useful, and contains advice from Alde Service, and, in the responses, from NuCamp Service too. Missing though, is the explanation for why the the 3.15A fuses frequently blow. The reason is that there is too much resistance in the negative wire from the battery to the ground bus bar (strip containing multiple negative 12 V wires) and from the bus bar to the converter (where breakers and fuses are located). There is too much resistance, because the wire diameter is too small for the length involved from bus bar to battery. So, when the converter is plugged into 120 AC (shore power), and sends a pulse of 12V DC to the battery to test positive resistance and determine the voltage to supply for charging the battery, the excess, instead of travelling down the negative wire to the battery, seeks a path of lower resistance, and finds one in the negative wires attached to other devices, specifically, in this case, the Alde, and blows the negative-side fuse, although it can also blow the positive side if the surge is big enough. The systemic solution is to change the negative wire from the battery to the bus bar, and from there to the converter. I recommend using a 6 AWG thin strand wire, which is the biggest that is practical, and which can be purchased by the foot at Home Depot. That way, 12 V voltage surges, or pulses, will not look for low resistance in any devices, like the CoolCat, or stereo, in addition to the Alde. Moreover, if you move the ground wire from the Alde off the negative bus and directly to the battery (I went with 12 AWG, just to have as little resistance as possible), back surges will not have a path to the Alde ground wire, as has been suggested by the service people. Now, I am not an electrical engineer, just an amateur, and a DIY guy, but I have had no further problems since making these changes.
I will close by relating an analogous experience with the Tab 400 . When I purchased it last Nov. 2, 2017, it came with a dead battery and a blown fuse protecting the battery. I replaced the fuse and charged the battery with a trickle charger, then plugged the trailer into 120 AC. At that point, the fan in the breaker box/ converter came on and stayed on. I contacted NuCamp warranty, and they sent me 10’ of 8 AWG wire, plus a 40 amp breaker, to replace the existing 10’ of 10 AWG wire with a 30 amp fuse. They did not include an explanation, but I surmise it is this: The resistance in the 10 AWG/30 Amp fuse arrangement was too high. Sometimes this resulted in blowing the fuse. When it didn’t blow the fuse, the converter sensed high resistance on the positive side (which generates heat) and turned on the cooling fan, even when the battery was already fully charged and no high amps were in use. By switching to a larger copper wire diameter and bigger breaker, resistance on the positive line from battery to converter was lowered and the problem was solved. Hmmm, what does this say about possible resistance problems with the 10’ of 10 AWG wire on the negative side of the system? Has NuCamp addressed this in more recent trailers? Might it be an issue for other models too? So, in my case, I switched to a larger diameter ground wire, I believe for the same reasons that NuCamp sent me a larger diameter positive battery wire from battery to converter.