My wife and I recently purchased a dealer holdover 2019 Cruiser Aire.
It is currently parked at our weekend cabin while we demolish the old structure and rebuild on site. I ran a dedicated 50 amp RV outlet so it is plugged into shore power.
We've spent a few weekends in and developed an idea for what camper living is about and some of the alterations we'd like to make.
I've also developed a list of questions that I can't seem to find answers to on my own.
1. I have the Renogy 200 watt solar kit and two Interstate 100 AH deep cycle batteries. I understand that they are flooded, lead acid batteries that will require maintenance and that I am limited to 50% depth of discharge. However, my question centers around the charging aspect. Since we are away five days each week, I am concerned that the onboard three stage charge controller will "fight" to maintain a float voltage. Based on the Renogy controller, the battery is maintaing 13.7V. But is this due to solar or the "smart" onboard controller. I'm concerned that one source might be trickle charging while the other, operating at a different set point, might still be boosting. I suppose that I could always open the solar panel breaker, but the power is unreliable there.
2. I had been keeping an eye on the gray and black water tanks. My unit has two gray water tanks. The bath/shower water level was 2/3 and the kitchen tank was 1/3. However, last night the sink was backed up. On a hunch, I drained the front gray water tank and the problem was solved. This leads me to ask two follow up questions: a.) Why did my shower not overflow first? Is there a check valve in place to prevent that? b.) How do I calibrate the water tank sensors to better reflect the water levels? This is a no name, all in control panel with no obvious rheostats to adjust. Could the be on the hidden, back side of the panel?
3. The unit came with a wine chiller. Pardon the ignorance here, as I've never before owned one, but are they useful as a refrigerator? We thought it might work as a second refrigerator but it's been disappointing. No matter the temperature setting it never seems to get cold, yet runs almost all of the time. It might be suitable for chilling wine, but I can't imagine storing food inside for long. I want to ditch it for either a proper dorm style refrigerator or maybe use the space for storage.
4. Back to batteries....if I add two additional flooded batteries for a total of 400AH (200 usable) and a 3000 watt true sine wave inverter, would that be enough surge capacity to handle a microwave without overworking the batteries? I understand that Li Ion would be ideal. Given that this is essentially a trailer that won't move much, I am not concerned about the weight gain but do fuss about the nearly $2000 price tag for the equivalent storage capacity.
I'm sure that there are other questions that will come with time, but knowing how to address these issues will allow to move on to discover others.
Thanks.