โJan-23-2015 01:37 PM
โJan-29-2015 09:33 AM
โJan-26-2015 05:30 PM
โJan-24-2015 02:17 PM
โJan-24-2015 12:39 PM
camper19709 wrote:No. You should be addressing the cause, like too little air circulation.
I will add a question here if I may. I have moisture/dampness under my regular mattress. It is between the regular mattress and the plywood platform. My question is: if I put a 12volt mattress pad there will it help keep the area dry?
โJan-24-2015 10:13 AM
โJan-24-2015 09:19 AM
โJan-24-2015 08:06 AM
naturist wrote:Brand?
e. The 120 volt one in the sticks and bricks is only 60 watts,
โJan-24-2015 06:23 AM
โJan-24-2015 05:54 AM
kaydeejay wrote:naturist wrote:3 amps at 12V is 36 Watts.
.....................It draws a max of 3 amps, and will save us on propane on those cold nights when we don't need to run the furnace to stay warm in bed.................
Not going to keep you toasty I'm afraid.
โJan-24-2015 05:49 AM
msiminoff wrote:I've just discovered that ElectroWarmth has them available again at http://electrowarmth.com/shop/
Did you actually speak with somebody at ElectroWarmth who confirmed they have the 12V queen size mattress pads again?
It appears to me that the all of ElectroWarmth "mattress pads" are 110Vac, and only their "bunk warmer" is 12Vdc... I did see the sentence on the queen page that says 12V, but I suspect it's a typo' ๐
-Mark
โJan-23-2015 08:16 PM
โJan-23-2015 06:17 PM
โJan-23-2015 03:23 PM
PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:LenSatic wrote:
We use this:
Don't even have to plug it in. ๐
LS
What do you do if it is a 3 Dog Night ?
โJan-23-2015 03:20 PM
LenSatic wrote:
We use this:
Don't even have to plug it in. ๐
LS