Forum Discussion
- ughExplorerWhen I lived in IL, I bought a cover for my Class A. It provided a great cover for raccoon to live under the cover and the raccoon chewed through both of my roof AC plastic cover. When it was windy, some area of the cover were rubbing against the body and damaged it despite the fact I tied it down real good. Also, it is heavy. You will have to get it on the roof and then spread it to cover it and you have to do this form the roof. Never again.
- korbeExplorerWe purchase a heavy duty tarp and rope it down each fall. Works fine.
- midnightsadieExplorer IIrun your gen set before you cover put stabilizer in the fuel and let run 15min or so, it,ll be just fine. take a chance on roof leak or cover its your choice. and if you wanna get in diring the winter ,just cover half way down.
- Cobra21Explorer
Tkotis5 wrote:
tobydad why do you put plywood under the tires this is are first rv we just got it in August so any suggestions will be a big help
Plywood under tires are a good choice if you are parked on concrete outside in snowy or constant wetness. Pro longed concrete and water give off a chemical reaction that tires don't do well with for prolonged periods of time. I once had a travel trailer parked on concrete without moving it for four years, only the bottoms of the tires were wasted.
And yes RV covers are a good choice, just as parking in a garage is better than outside.
Brian - ronfishermanModeratorMine is cover when it will not be used for a month or more.
Cover was bought in 2006. Cover is still in good shape. It is a CalMark. - EMD360ExplorerOur cover is a Classic Accessories 80-128-151001-00 Overdrive PermaPro Heavy Duty RV Cover for 20' to 23' Class C RVs ordered through Amazon.
We bought it last year and unfortunately wore a hole in the front from the sharp underside of the bumper, even though I tried to cover the sharp edges with tape and bubble wrap. Turns out we had excess material in front which made it difficult to tie and allowed rubbing through the material.
This year we pulled the excess to the rear. It seems to result in a much better fit. The former front hole is now at the side over a tire and there appear to be no rubbing points. It gets very windy here in Colorado but there was no problem keeping the cover on and it is relatively easy to access the RV with the many zippers it has on the corners and sides. - elfhearseExplorerWinnebago Aspect 2013, my Winterization ritual FWIW:
Also use a Cover (ADCO Tyvek brown & tan) Make sure you pick a day where the WINDS are forecast to be calm to install it.
* Drive up on wooden boards to keep the tires off the stones.
* Pull the Ford battery and keep it in my garage on a CTEK tender.
* Pull the K&N air filter and cover intake with plastic wrap & tape.
* I use plastic clamps along the side to underbody trim to keep the cover secured all around the RV as the Winter winds can shred the cover if it is allowed to flap loose. (outside storage lot parking) - EMD360ExplorerPlastic clamps are a great idea. Thanks.
- ron_dittmerExplorer IIOur RV cover protects nicely against the elements, rodents, raccoons, thieves, and even freezing temps.....our under-the-house garage HERE.
But getting serious now, have you considered a nearby pole barn or warehouse that is being used for boat and RV storage? Since much manufacturing left the country, and retail space always becoming available, some of those underutilized buildings are available for RV storage either permanently or temporarily, some seasonally. A local farmer with a huge pole barn might charge you an affordable rate. Spend 15 minutes on the internet and see if anything in your area is found. You might be surprised how affordable indoor storage might be. It is for only a 4 month period. Some storage is heated, some with electric available for a battery tender. I personally would go cheap and find a non-heated place, park the rig, place rodent traps inside and under the hood, take the batteries home and not worry about running the generator and main engine during those 4 months.
Go on Craigslist right now and search for "RV Storage" and see what comes up. I quickly found some around me like this one HERE, and HERE TOO. Some are repeats, most are outdoors but some are indoors. Consider it as a rider on your insurance policy and it won't sting so much.
I feel that indoor winter storage is especially for those who have a pile of money tied up in their motor home. - rockhillmanorExplorer
Tkotis5 wrote:
We live in Illinois and get some bad weather I was reading on some of the other forums people don't recommend covering, once its winteriz we won't use it till spring we bought used and want to protect if it's a good idea
I am from Illinois also. The incredible high winds and cold weather we experience in the winter makes it real difficult to prevent the covers from flapping and ripping and/or rubbing on the RV.
My MH sat thru many of winters in my driveway un covered and has done well. The only thing I learned was to NOT brush the snow off the cab over decals during the winter. The underside of the snow had melted and froze somewhat and I did put too much pressure on the brush.
Come spring I noticed I had made the edges of the decals all raggedy from brushing it.
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