maillemaker wrote:
I weighed my RV once at a truck stop and we are under weight so that's not a problem either. But then my under-rig compartments and cabinets are all mostly empty. I don't know what you guys take camping with you but for me it's a soft bag full of clothes for the weekend and some guns and that's about it. I suspect the food and water weigh more than anything else. A couple of times we have gone for week-long trips to Disney and then the cabinets get pretty well used up but I still don't put anything in the dirty and rusty old under-rig compartments except my little gas grill. Well, I recently relocated my house battery into the compartment behind the generator and added a second one. the rest of the compartment is a rubbermaid tub for the poop pipe.
We have an overkill E450 chassis under our relatively small 24 foot Class C, so it's irrelevant how much "stuff" we carry along weight-wise. It has seven (7) outside storage compartments that are steel walled, with carpeted floors, and with lockable slam-shut doors with heavy rubber seals around the doors. They do not get dusty when on-road or off-road.
We don't like to have to custom pack our RV for each particular trip, so we have in it at all times just about everything that would be required for any type of trip, any need on a trip, and as much Plan B backup for equipment failures as possible so we don't have to mess with getting help in strange places or heading for home.
Here's a list of some of the non-food items we keep our 24 foot Class C loaded with for every trip - mostly in the outside cabinets and under the cab seats. We don't strap anything to the roof ladder and the sewer hoses are carried in outside storage cabinets - not in a tube along, or instead of, the full size steel rear bumper:
- A full size shovel.
- A extended lift 12 ton hydraulic jack.
- A Honda portable generator (in addition to the built-in Onan).
- A full size beach umbrella.
- A full pressure continuous sevice 120V compressor.
- A CHP service rated tow chain.
- A full size spare tire and lug wrench.
- All the leveling blocks and wood pieces I mentioned earlier in this topic tread.
- A remote inspection scope.
- A powerful 12V ventilation fan with a 15 foot extension cord.
- A set of crutches.
- A heating pad.
- A blood pressure monitor.
- A couple of CPAP machines.
- A 5 gallon bucket.
- A 3 gallon bucket.
- Spare oil for the V10, the Onan, and the Honda.
- A spare serpentine belt for the V10.
- A full size broom.
- A roll of 4" Eternabond.
- A chaulking gun and both types of chaulk ... self-leveling and non-self-leveling.
- A volt/amp digital meter.
- A couple of trucker-type tire pressure guages.
- A set of tire chains.
- Two lounge chairs ... a His size and a Hers size.
- Three regular lawn chairs.
- Three small chairside tables.
- A large folding table.
- A large assortment of tools.
- A hand saw for cutting large limbs.
- A small saw for cutting small limbs.
- A portable BBQ.
- An outside single cooking burner.
- A bunch of rocking hounding equipment such as chisels, pickaxes, etc..
- A couple of down jackets.
- A couple of rain coats.
- A couple of umbrellas ... one of which is a light color to do double service as a sun umbrella.
- Several flashlights.
- Two outside table lights.
- Rope.
- Clothes for all kinds of weather.
- An outside carpet.
- A 2 gallon propane tank and a 5 gallon propane tank.
- A large outdoor propane firepit.
- Two sets of binoculars.
- Spare gas for the portable Honda generator.
- Various spare engine fluids.
- A portable battery charger.
- A couple of 15 foot sewer hoses.
- A 5 foot sewer extension hose.
- 100 feet of potable water hoses.
- A 50 foot heavy duty extension cord.
- Several standard extension cords.
- Several spare sewer hookup fittings.
- A tire puncture repair kit.
- A couple of cans of slow tire leak inflator/sealers.
- A portable battery charger.
For the special fishing-only trips where we tow our small boat along, we add fishing equipment and life jackets to the above list.