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living in a 5th wheel gas or electrict $$$

drae0814
Explorer
Explorer
Just moved into an rv park for the next year while my wife finnish Med school. we are in a nice park in Southern California the weather is 77 out but it gets cold for us at night is it cheaper to run the gas for hot water and heat, or electric advice please from some of you folks that have been doing this for awhile i will have a electrict bill but we have only been in the park for a week

The RV we are in 2011 Douthchman Colorado 37ft 5th wheel


Thanks folks
enjoy life while you can:D

05 Dodge HEMI Quad Cab
2011 Dutchmen Colorado 5th wheel 37 ft
27 REPLIES 27

whiskyrunner
Explorer
Explorer
If you want to see how much elect you used tomorrow, read the five numbers on the meter tonight and then use your electric as needed and then check your meter numbers the next day and see what the difference is... is if your meter reads 13579 today and next day reads 13600 you only used 21 kw of electric. This will give you a idea of what you will use in months time, 21(or whatever you used in one day ) x days in month
2000 Ford F250,4x4 diesel short box,Firestone airbags
2004 Terry Quantum 36ft fiver,4 slides

laknox
Nomad
Nomad
drae0814 wrote:
Thanks Don i will check that site, Iam worryed about my first electrict bill now as we have been running our 1500watt heaters alot to keep the RV around 70 when relaxing in the evening and running only a 1200watt at night set at 65 in the bedroom.

We are not snowbirds so when we leave for work we turn everything off for the day. only thing using power is the converter bedroom clock microwave clock fridge. I guess that is about it


Another thing you can do is to bring your slides in when you leave, or even at night. That way, you're not bleeding off heat from the roof and floor of the slide. Again, think about skirting, including the under-hitch area. =Anything= to make a dead air space will help.

Lyle
2022 GMC Sierra 3500 HD Denali Crew Cab 4x4 Duramax
B&W OEM Companion & Gooseneck Kit
2017 KZ Durango 1500 D277RLT
1936 John Deere Model A
International Flying Farmers 64 Year Member

drae0814
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks Don i will check that site, Iam worryed about my first electrict bill now as we have been running our 1500watt heaters alot to keep the RV around 70 when relaxing in the evening and running only a 1200watt at night set at 65 in the bedroom.

We are not snowbirds so when we leave for work we turn everything off for the day. only thing using power is the converter bedroom clock microwave clock fridge. I guess that is about it
enjoy life while you can:D

05 Dodge HEMI Quad Cab
2011 Dutchmen Colorado 5th wheel 37 ft

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi,

Here is a calculator to compare costs:

http://www.maxmcarter.com/fuels/fuelscalc.html

Electric heaters are very nearly 100% efficient. I prefer 1/2 size oil filled units which I can tuck away into otherwise wasted space.

Where I am forced to winter, electricity is included in the campsite. Clearly that is cheaper than paying for propane.

Turn on the water heater on electric as soon as you wake up. Leave it on until after the showers happen, then turn it off until the next needed use. Mine cycles about every four hours, if no water has been used, and runs for about fifteen minutes. Since there are six cycles per day that adds up to 1.5 hours of unnecessary run time.

From water at ambient temperatures to first cycle takes about 90 minutes for a ten gallon tank on the electric setting. It is about 45 minutes on propane and about 25 using both.

Using electricity for space heating can work well. Is your RV 30 amp or 50 amp? If only 30 you may find it convenient to add a second shore power cord.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

neal10a
Explorer
Explorer
It is all about btu's. What is the cost/btu for gas, electric, oil and etc. saying that if your propane costs 3.25/gal and electric is .12/kw then it is a draw assuming the gas heater is 80% efficient and the electric heater is 95% efficient.

SkiSmuggs
Explorer
Explorer
Get a good comforter/thermal blanket and flannel sheets for the bed. With all three, we have slept comfortably down into the forties INSIDE the camper. We set the furnace for 50 degrees just in case, but that does allow the living room to go down to 45. A small ceramic or oil fill heater can supplement the bath/bedroom if you feel the need. No need to heat the entire unit for those 8 hours.
Also, put towels or other insulating materials along the slider seals and look for other insulating opportunities like Styrofoam panels in the basement storage ceiling to help keep the bedroom warmer.
An electric mattress pad or blanket can pre-warm the bed for you.
You can also shrink wrap the larger windows with kits from any hardware store and a hair dryer.
2015 F350 XLT PSD 6.7 Crew Cab, Andersen Ultimate hitch
2012 Cougar High Country 299RKS 5th wheel, Mor/Ryde pinbox, 300w of solar

alboy
Explorer
Explorer
In a colder month like dec/jan we have used 275.00 per month elect only, heating a 36 ft with winter pkg in Palm Springs.Some elderly campers i know have bills in the 350/ 400 range heating it like a home.

sdetweil
Explorer
Explorer
drae0814 wrote:
we have gas and electrict not sure what a heat pump is? we will receive a bill its only been about 2 weeks no bill yet, i guess the bill will help me decide


heat pump is effectively a reverse A/C, it takes outside warmth and expels it inside..

my Alpine has
A/C
heat pump
furnace

A/C and HP run on electric, furnace on propane
My house is all electric, uses a heat pump..

good reading here http://www.damouth.org/RVStuff/PortHeat.shtml
search for 'Heat Pumps:'
2012 Ford F350 DRW, 6.7 diesel.
2013 Keystone Alpine 3720FB

laknox
Nomad
Nomad
Get an oil-filled radiator-style heater. We have one next to our bed at home and have as yet to fire up the house heater. Were we to do any winter camping, I'd be using one. Do check into the big propane bottle; much easier to deal with. If your park will allow skirting, that also helps. Putting a couple 100w bulbs underneath will help warm the floor, though you won't have tank freezing issues.

Lyle
2022 GMC Sierra 3500 HD Denali Crew Cab 4x4 Duramax
B&W OEM Companion & Gooseneck Kit
2017 KZ Durango 1500 D277RLT
1936 John Deere Model A
International Flying Farmers 64 Year Member

Racine96
Explorer
Explorer
OP, the figures I mentioned was for both LP and electricity combined. Last winter was my first in south TX and i did not know how cold it can be at night. Maybe is different where you are. Wish you well

drae0814
Explorer
Explorer
should say cold not gold
enjoy life while you can:D

05 Dodge HEMI Quad Cab
2011 Dutchmen Colorado 5th wheel 37 ft

drae0814
Explorer
Explorer
Yes Dave but even in Socal it gets gold to me when it gets down to 48-50 i need heat

and 9111 i will look into that thanks all for your help
enjoy life while you can:D

05 Dodge HEMI Quad Cab
2011 Dutchmen Colorado 5th wheel 37 ft

drae0814
Explorer
Explorer
Good point Michelle, I see some larger tanks around the park , will have to check into that
enjoy life while you can:D

05 Dodge HEMI Quad Cab
2011 Dutchmen Colorado 5th wheel 37 ft

Michelle_S
Explorer III
Explorer III
Even if Propane is a little cheaper, unless you get a big external tank, pulling tanks and taking them to be refilled will get old really fast. Where as the electric only requires opening the wallet a little farther.
2018 Chevy 3500HD High Country Crew Cab DRW, D/A, 2016 Redwood 39MB, Dual AC, Fireplace, Sleep #Bed, Auto Sat Dish, Stack Washer/Dryer, Auto Level Sys, Disk Brakes, Onan Gen, 17.5" "H" tires, MORryde Pin & IS, Comfort Ride, Dual Awnings, Full Body Paint