Forum Discussion

kkiger's avatar
kkiger
Explorer
Dec 17, 2013

Living in class A

I've been living in my coach now for about 6 months. I'm in GA, so the weather isn't terrible, but it's about to start dipping below freezing on a regular basis. I don't think my coach was made for living in, but I'm fortunate to have something.

As winter approaches, please offer advice, tips, suggestions of things I'm probably not thinking about.

I have wrapped my water hose in the black foam stuff from tip to tip and plan on getting covers for the connections.

I have added a "T" to the propane inlet so I don't have to move the coach every time I need propane.

I need to replace the ceiling fan in the bathroom, any suggestions? Is it as easy as it looks? 4 screws on bottom, maybe a few up top(haven't looked) and then seal it?
  • You should have no problems with your RV in that climate. Take the advice offered above and you should be in great shape for lower temperatures. The bathroom fan is easy to replace. There are better replacements from Fantastic Vent and Vortex
  • Make sure you leave cabinet doors open where there is plumbing inside, sink and lavatory cabinets where ever your pump is. depending on how cold it gets, you may have to get some heat tape for your hose.
    We have camped in cold weather where it got to around 30 degrees with no problem.
    As for the fan, not a big job at all. I just replaced a vent with a fantastic fan in about an hour. Fortunately they had run wiring to the vent just in case you wanted a fan.
  • When in freezing temps, I only hook up water and sewer to dump and fill my tanks. No hose to worry about freezing.
    I keep my water tank topped off which means that it will take a long time for it to even possibly freeze. I put a 100 watt light bulb in the wet compartment to keep the water pump from freezing.
    I also have one of those PORTABLE heat pump/AC units that works fine in cold weather. Puts out a lot of heat and I don't have to worry about it shutting off when the temps drop into the teens. The heat pump puts out twice the BTU's on the same amount of electric as a radiant electric heater.
    Enjoy!