Cptnvideo wrote:
"Electric isn’t even needed except for water pump and furnace. Get priorities straight."
Your 3 way fridge won't run without electric (battery). Neither will lights. Without electric from either solar or generator, your batteries will eventually become useless and at that point, nothing will function in your RV.
I've got my priorities straight.
Electric not needed for lighting.
Amp draw for 3-way ref/frz is minimal.
Only furnace fan & water pump (which could be manual) have enough demand to warrant battery use.
Have a look at 1950s trailers. The difference here from car-camping pre-war is the propane system built-in to service stove/oven, water heater, lighting, furnace, and refrigerator/freezer.
Need & Desire aren’t the same.
Priority is Propane System (and capacity) first, with Water System (and capacity) a very close second (as it could be re-filled from stream or well).
**What limits self-sufficiency over time (X-nights aboard) is the determinant.**
Solar is “nice”. That’s it.
Besides high expense (and limited life) it has too many points of potential failure.
No one stops you from having the additional system at its higher-cost, despite lower reliability and a shorter life if that’s the way you want to do it.
I’ve solar on mine. Keeps a pair of batteries charged. But won’t change the time factor in needing re-supply.
That said, I’m all in favor of maximizing each system. If I hadn’t shore power, then what? If I lost propane, then what? Lost even 12V, then what? A worthwhile exercise to avoid or delay having to abandon the RV for other lodgings (at the heart of why I’m no fan of motorhomes as the drivetrain/chassis — alone — does this regularly).
— An example of this is retro-fitting an electric furnace to utilize the existing fan & ducting (CheapHeat, by Rvcomfortsystems).
Solar has its place in the mix.
Separate gensets really don’t (bandaid). Ones TV might be so equipped, but that’s not the RV itself (as one can lose its services separately from the RV).
Propane gensets were once fitted to TTs (maybe still are), but their performance was lacking, to say the least. As a fallback it’s an expensive, limited-use component and likelier to shorten self-sufficiency even sooner.
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