โAug-04-2019 01:58 PM
โAug-07-2019 01:16 PM
ajriding wrote:TNGW1500SE wrote:
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I had a small trailer, Heco pop-up roof, that had the window AC from the factory just like this pic, minus the clever luggage, which would have been a great addition.
I never knew the btu, but it was small and I think my 2200 gen ran it.Even with the tent sides it would cool the upper bunk just fine. I eventually added some cardboard to help shoot the cold air (off the top of the unit) up and keep it away from the lower intake.
Poor design did not always drain water off and when the trailer nose pointed down and AC had water in the pan it would leak on the floor. Most ACs have the pan fill with water and the condenser sits in the water to help cool. Great for a house, bad to have a full pan of water in a camper. I poked holes in the pan and tilted the AC unit more away from the camper. Rot was not too bad and the fix was possible.
Anyway, this is why I know little Ac units would work for my situation.
I'm still debating the whole AC thing. I hate to buy from Amazon anymore, looked elsewhere and found a Coleman 9200 for $613, so this brings me closer to maybe thinking about a small roof unit again.
We will see in the next days if my roof will hold the weightโฆ
Debate is all over the place if a 2200 will run a 9200btu at all altitudes (at least under 6,oooft)โฆ
โAug-07-2019 01:00 PM
mobeewan wrote:jjrbus wrote:
I would put a mini in my RV in a heartbeat if I had room for the inside unit. However they are expensive to install properly. I have 3 in my house and have about $800 worth of tools for installing them.
A $99 window ac is likely going to be a 5000 btu unit, too small for most RV's. When I added one to my 21 foot Toyota I found that 8000 btu was the minimum. Although there was a 7100 btu available from the factory when new. No room over fridge or I would have put mine there, it has been done numerous times.
Some can get very creative!
Not expensive at hall. If you go on YouTube and type in "split mini AC install in trailer" or "split mini AC install in schoolie" there are many do-it-yourself installations in travel trailers, enclosed utility camper builds and school bus to RV conversions. There are even videos that show DYI installation homes.
โAug-07-2019 10:57 AM
jjrbus wrote:
I would put a mini in my RV in a heartbeat if I had room for the inside unit. However they are expensive to install properly. I have 3 in my house and have about $800 worth of tools for installing them.
A $99 window ac is likely going to be a 5000 btu unit, too small for most RV's. When I added one to my 21 foot Toyota I found that 8000 btu was the minimum. Although there was a 7100 btu available from the factory when new. No room over fridge or I would have put mine there, it has been done numerous times.
Some can get very creative!
โAug-07-2019 06:41 AM
TNGW1500SE wrote:
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โAug-07-2019 04:50 AM
ajriding wrote:
8,000 is fine with me. Have you run it at high altitude? The gen will lose power in thin air..
โAug-06-2019 07:52 PM
โAug-06-2019 08:35 AM
โAug-05-2019 04:44 PM
โAug-05-2019 08:00 AM
โAug-05-2019 04:50 AM
โAug-05-2019 01:42 AM
โAug-04-2019 08:24 PM
โAug-04-2019 07:48 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,I happen to own a mini split unit. It is whisper quiet and so efficient the condenser fan doesn't even run for about 4 or 5 hours.
The research may be out of date.
โAug-04-2019 06:02 PM
ajriding wrote:
research on minisplits reveals expensive and inefficient. People are not happy with them overall for rv. I ruled that out, there is still an outside unit that has to be placed also
thanks