Forum Discussion
pnichols
Feb 03, 2014Explorer II
b,
You should see our Class C now sitting in a campground over-night on the way back to home in CA. It's a real dust-ball ... inside and out ... even though we tried our best to maintain positive air pressure in the interior whenever traveling out on the desert roads East of Quartzsite.
We spent some time out in the middle of nowhere in Northwest Texas DURING AUGUST a few years ago in our Class C. The DW nearly had heat stroke out away from our Class C rockhounding. I had to fire up the Onan, put the coach A/C on MAX, and idle the V10 with it's cab air on MAX too ... in order to cool her down. It sure was remote, pristine, and quiet out there. You often find that in hot places because most folks don't know how to deal with heat and won't go to places where it's hot ... so that's when/where one can really get away, if you're prepared.
By the way, you should have visited ALAMO lake in Arizona while there for Quartzsite. Many miles on a desert road to get to it that dead-ends at it. This beauty is way out in the Arizona outback and is representative of one of my favorite RV exploring excuses -> locating and RV'ing to bodies of water that are where water doesn't belong.
You should see our Class C now sitting in a campground over-night on the way back to home in CA. It's a real dust-ball ... inside and out ... even though we tried our best to maintain positive air pressure in the interior whenever traveling out on the desert roads East of Quartzsite.
We spent some time out in the middle of nowhere in Northwest Texas DURING AUGUST a few years ago in our Class C. The DW nearly had heat stroke out away from our Class C rockhounding. I had to fire up the Onan, put the coach A/C on MAX, and idle the V10 with it's cab air on MAX too ... in order to cool her down. It sure was remote, pristine, and quiet out there. You often find that in hot places because most folks don't know how to deal with heat and won't go to places where it's hot ... so that's when/where one can really get away, if you're prepared.
By the way, you should have visited ALAMO lake in Arizona while there for Quartzsite. Many miles on a desert road to get to it that dead-ends at it. This beauty is way out in the Arizona outback and is representative of one of my favorite RV exploring excuses -> locating and RV'ing to bodies of water that are where water doesn't belong.
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