Forum Discussion
3,114 Replies
- Brad820ExplorerReplaced the burst water heater. Checked plumbing for leaks after WH installation.
Tested refrigerator on LPG.
Re-installed trim around the cabover after re-building a portion of the front that experienced water damage from leaking clearance lights and a leaking window.
Waiting on trim piece from Lance. - Mello_MikeExplorer
Buzzcut1 wrote:
Funny that it took me two years to check this but. I never could understand why we slept so hot in our TC even when it was in the mid 20's outside like it was in Yosemite during New Years and so many people here mentioned how the cold just came up through the mattress.. so I finally checked underneath. Yep Carl the guy I bought it from had put Reflectex down....
I'm going to have to put some of that down underneath our mattress. Do they come in rolls 60 inches wide? I've purchased reflectex in 24 inch wide rolls but never anything that wide. - Buzzcut1Nomad IIFunny that it took me two years to check this but. I never could understand why we slept so hot in our TC even when it was in the mid 20's outside like it was in Yosemite during New Years and so many people here mentioned how the cold just came up through the mattress.. so I finally checked underneath. Yep Carl the guy I bought it from had put Reflectex down....

I also glued two coat hooks to the wall

- TwoMaineiacsExplorerGot out the tubs of "stuff" that gets put in the camper and started going through it all to see what doesn't really need to go. Refreshed the first aid kit, washed the linens. Supposed to be 50F here this coming week so we'll take the cover off and think about putting the batteries back in. Joe will do the load test on the batteries to see how they wintered with the trickle chargers. Last two snow storsm, the town plow left us a big mound in front of where we store the camper. That's got to be chopped through before we can load it.
- Buzzcut1Nomad IIwell when my wife gets home and sees it she will say "Who are you and what did you do with my husband"
I did some spring cleaning, changed out the sheets cleared out the counters , cabinets and shower, resealed some seams on the exterior storage comparments...etc
my tidy 08 Lance 1055

The Dry Bath


kitchen and bed
dining
some old guy with a buzzcut
- MAV_8801ExplorerTook the truck to the Chevy Dealer yesterday for a Lube and a oil change.. Also had the steering damper replaced and an alignment preformed. I also had a bulb out in the rear tail light assembly. I bought all eight bulbs and replaced them. Now she is ready to go for the springtime.
- Camper_Jeff___KNavigator
JoeChiOhki wrote:
Camper_Jeff_&_Kelli wrote:
I am performing a battery test on the TCs new AGMs. I've got four lights and the stereo running to see how the battery charge holds up. I started the test about 10:30 and checked it at 6:30. The voltage on the batteries has gone from 12.8-9 Volts down to 12.5-4 Volts and at 8:30, just now, 12.4 steady volts. I'm waiting to see how long it takes to get the batteries down to 12.2 steady Volts. The stereo is rated to use up to 10 amps so I will call that 5 amps since I'm not actually measuring it but it is turned up a little loud to drive the 4x50W amps more. Four lights are on totaling 8 amps. Total amps being used for the test is about 13 amps. Right now, we are at 13 amps for 10 hours or 130 amp hours of output and the batteries are still at 70% or so. 12.2 volts is considered 60%. The other thing this test will let me do is see if the new Power Max, Boon Docker, 45 amp power supply, when turned back on, will kick into the bulk charge mode at 14.6-7 volts.
UPDATE:
It's 10:00 and the test period is over. The battery was registering 12.4-3 volts so I turned on 4 more lamps, 10 more amps for 00:30 minutes and the battery never registered less than 12.3 volts. At 10:00, I turned off the 4 additional lights and the battery voltage went back up to 12.4 volts. I shut off 3 of the other 4 lights and the stereo leaving only 1 twin tube fluorescent lamp operating at 18 W / 1.4 amps. The battery voltage went up to a stable 12.5 volts after what should be an effective 12 hours @ 13 amps for a total of 156 amp hours of usage. Looking at the battery usage table near the bottom of this page, (Northern Arizona Wind & Sun). After 12 hours of 13 AMP load and using the loaded voltage reading of 12.3 volts, my new SEARS PM-1 AGM batteries never discharged below 70% of full charge according to their table for DOD "Depth of Discharge". When I shut off all the loads, leaving only one fixture operating, the voltage read 12.5 volts or 80-90% of a full charge. I am very impressed by the performance of these batteries.
I plugged the Power Max in after the test was over and the voltage output of the power supply only went to 13.2 volts. The power supply did not kick into the bulk charge mode of 14.6 volts. I guess it didn’t recognize that the batteries had discharged enough to warrant a bulk charge. Now I’m really interested in heading out for a weekend with no shore power for a couple days to see how the whole system works with the 4 gauge wiring upgrade to the truck alternator for charging purposes and the solar panels contribution which today was for about 2 hours was measured at 1 amp @ 14.2 volts or 14.2 watts.
While this test is running, I did my weekly walk around the TC. After lots of rain the last couple days I discovered the rear left side exterior compartment had wetness. I looked around for a source but could find no obvious cause. I did notice the putty seal for the TC left rear tail light looked dry and brittle so I removed the fixture. There it was, totally wet inside. I scraped off all the old putty and installed new putty. I also caulked the top and sides of the tail light fixture to further seal it, leaving the bottom un-caulked to allow an escape route for water. It will be a couple days of drying to verify if this fixed the problem or not. I did scrape and caulk a couple suspicious places with the edge metal strip too while I was at it.
If yer steady voltage was at 12.5, the system still thinks yer batteries are at around 85-90% of charge (12.6+ is considered full charge on a wet cell) and went to the appropriate charging state which likely in the design is 13.2 to prevent excess boiling.
Drawn down to a steady voltage of 12.3, mine goes up to the next stage of 13.71 volts, however, the batteries are also cold so their current movement is down as well as it's possible to still be near the batteries available capacity when its core temp is around 40 degrees with a lower voltage.
Yes. The batteries performed much better than expected especially when considering it was only about 38 degrees out and the Power Max Power Supply did as expected since the batteries did not discharge deep enough to initiate a bulk or absorbtion charge cycle. This page has great information about batteries.
(Northern Arizona Wind & Sun).
Jeff - JoeChiOhkiExplorer II
Camper_Jeff_&_Kelli wrote:
I am performing a battery test on the TCs new AGMs. I've got four lights and the stereo running to see how the battery charge holds up. I started the test about 10:30 and checked it at 6:30. The voltage on the batteries has gone from 12.8-9 Volts down to 12.5-4 Volts and at 8:30, just now, 12.4 steady volts. I'm waiting to see how long it takes to get the batteries down to 12.2 steady Volts. The stereo is rated to use up to 10 amps so I will call that 5 amps since I'm not actually measuring it but it is turned up a little loud to drive the 4x50W amps more. Four lights are on totaling 8 amps. Total amps being used for the test is about 13 amps. Right now, we are at 13 amps for 10 hours or 130 amp hours of output and the batteries are still at 70% or so. 12.2 volts is considered 60%. The other thing this test will let me do is see if the new Power Max, Boon Docker, 45 amp power supply, when turned back on, will kick into the bulk charge mode at 14.6-7 volts.
UPDATE:
It's 10:00 and the test period is over. The battery was registering 12.4-3 volts so I turned on 4 more lamps, 10 more amps for 00:30 minutes and the battery never registered less than 12.3 volts. At 10:00, I turned off the 4 additional lights and the battery voltage went back up to 12.4 volts. I shut off 3 of the other 4 lights and the stereo leaving only 1 twin tube fluorescent lamp operating at 18 W / 1.4 amps. The battery voltage went up to a stable 12.5 volts after what should be an effective 12 hours @ 13 amps for a total of 156 amp hours of usage. Looking at the battery usage table near the bottom of this page, (Northern Arizona Wind & Sun). After 12 hours of 13 AMP load and using the loaded voltage reading of 12.3 volts, my new SEARS PM-1 AGM batteries never discharged below 70% of full charge according to their table for DOD "Depth of Discharge". When I shut off all the loads, leaving only one fixture operating, the voltage read 12.5 volts or 80-90% of a full charge. I am very impressed by the performance of these batteries.
I plugged the Power Max in after the test was over and the voltage output of the power supply only went to 13.2 volts. The power supply did not kick into the bulk charge mode of 14.6 volts. I guess it didn’t recognize that the batteries had discharged enough to warrant a bulk charge. Now I’m really interested in heading out for a weekend with no shore power for a couple days to see how the whole system works with the 4 gauge wiring upgrade to the truck alternator for charging purposes and the solar panels contribution which today was for about 2 hours was measured at 1 amp @ 14.2 volts or 14.2 watts.
While this test is running, I did my weekly walk around the TC. After lots of rain the last couple days I discovered the rear left side exterior compartment had wetness. I looked around for a source but could find no obvious cause. I did notice the putty seal for the TC left rear tail light looked dry and brittle so I removed the fixture. There it was, totally wet inside. I scraped off all the old putty and installed new putty. I also caulked the top and sides of the tail light fixture to further seal it, leaving the bottom un-caulked to allow an escape route for water. It will be a couple days of drying to verify if this fixed the problem or not. I did scrape and caulk a couple suspicious places with the edge metal strip too while I was at it.
If yer steady voltage was at 12.5, the system still thinks yer batteries are at around 85-90% of charge (12.6+ is considered full charge on a wet cell) and went to the appropriate charging state which likely in the design is 13.2 to prevent excess boiling.
Drawn down to a steady voltage of 12.3, mine goes up to the next stage of 13.71 volts, however, the batteries are also cold so their current movement is down as well as it's possible to still be near the batteries available capacity when its core temp is around 40 degrees with a lower voltage. - Camper_Jeff___KNavigatorI am performing a battery test on the TCs new AGMs. I've got four lights and the stereo running to see how the battery charge holds up. I started the test about 10:30 and checked it at 6:30. The voltage on the batteries has gone from 12.8-9 Volts down to 12.5-4 Volts and at 8:30, just now, 12.4 steady volts. I'm waiting to see how long it takes to get the batteries down to 12.2 steady Volts. The stereo is rated to use up to 10 amps so I will call that 5 amps since I'm not actually measuring it but it is turned up a little loud to drive the 4x50W amps more. Four lights are on totaling 8 amps. Total amps being used for the test is about 13 amps. Right now, we are at 13 amps for 10 hours or 130 amp hours of output and the batteries are still at 70% or so. 12.2 volts is considered 60%. The other thing this test will let me do is see if the new Power Max, Boon Docker, 45 amp power supply, when turned back on, will kick into the bulk charge mode at 14.6-7 volts.
UPDATE:
It's 10:00 and the test period is over. The battery was registering 12.4-3 volts so I turned on 4 more lamps, 10 more amps for 00:30 minutes and the battery never registered less than 12.3 volts. At 10:00, I turned off the 4 additional lights and the battery voltage went back up to 12.4 volts. I shut off 3 of the other 4 lights and the stereo leaving only 1 twin tube fluorescent lamp operating at 18 W / 1.4 amps. The battery voltage went up to a stable 12.5 volts after what should be an effective 12 hours @ 13 amps for a total of 156 amp hours of usage. Looking at the battery usage table near the bottom of this page, (Northern Arizona Wind & Sun). After 12 hours of 13 AMP load and using the loaded voltage reading of 12.3 volts, my new SEARS PM-1 AGM batteries never discharged below 70% of full charge according to their table for DOD "Depth of Discharge". When I shut off all the loads, leaving only one fixture operating, the voltage read 12.5 volts or 80-90% of a full charge. I am very impressed by the performance of these batteries.
I plugged the Power Max in after the test was over and the voltage output of the power supply only went to 13.2 volts. The power supply did not kick into the bulk charge mode of 14.6 volts. I guess it didn’t recognize that the batteries had discharged enough to warrant a bulk charge. Now I’m really interested in heading out for a weekend with no shore power for a couple days to see how the whole system works with the 4 gauge wiring upgrade to the truck alternator for charging purposes and the solar panels contribution which today was for about 2 hours was measured at 1 amp @ 14.2 volts or 14.2 watts.
While this test is running, I did my weekly walk around the TC. After lots of rain the last couple days I discovered the rear left side exterior compartment had wetness. I looked around for a source but could find no obvious cause. I did notice the putty seal for the TC left rear tail light looked dry and brittle so I removed the fixture. There it was, totally wet inside. I scraped off all the old putty and installed new putty. I also caulked the top and sides of the tail light fixture to further seal it, leaving the bottom un-caulked to allow an escape route for water. It will be a couple days of drying to verify if this fixed the problem or not. I did scrape and caulk a couple suspicious places with the edge metal strip too while I was at it. - ahassellExplorerI just picked up my Lance 1988 LC 780 Saturday the 25th. And It needs lots of work. Started by pulling all the stuff out ( seat cushions, the little widow unit they left in it. They had it on a frame and placed the window unit in the pass-through window. They made a home-made mattress to go in the cab over it was 3 inches thick and made with soft foam, The stove didn't work so its gone. They dropped the vent hood, and it was trashed its gone ) started cleaning and checking it out. The vent covers they are all cracked, ( new vents on the way ) ordered a new stove it will be here the 1st. I cleaned some more emptied all the old spices and canned goods left in it. I had to fix one drawer that was broken.
THE CAB OVER AREA IS NOW CLEAN.
Lights now I learned something when I removed the vent hood, I cut the wires then later I noticed that all the lights on the right side where dead ( they were working ) So after about three hours of troubleshooting I found out they are in series cut one wire, and the rest get no power. I FIXED THAT at the moment the right-side lights are working. I have to work on the florescent lights I have to figure out are they 12 v or 110. They were working when I looked at it ( I am hooked up to an extension cord from the side of the house maybe not enough power? )
This weekend I plan to install the stove and clean the Kitchen area re weather strip the door.
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298 PostsLatest Activity: Jun 29, 2026