โJul-14-2019 03:59 PM
โJul-18-2019 12:13 PM
โJul-18-2019 08:56 AM
โJul-17-2019 06:39 PM
JaxDad wrote:AJR wrote:
I donโt know about all the above said. I do know in my two class Cs with only the engine AC working. The cab and the living space up to the kitchen area were cooled. Past that when I stopped I had to turn on the coach AC to get the bedroom cool also with the house AC. I do insulate the cab from the house when stopped.
When I had a class A I had to run the house AC on the road when driving into the sun. The chassis AC did not compare to the AC in a class C.
Just me experience with a gasser Class A.
Which is EXACTLY why I was trying to share some knowledge.
The Ford E-Series A/C is incredibly powerful, but itโs ability to blow air around is severely lacking. It has a puny little 12 volt fan that just isnโt up to the task of moving enough air to cool a M/H.
However, using the above-noted method of opening the rearmost roof vent allows the vacuum to overcome what the fan canโt, getting cool air to the back and draw out the hot air back there at the roof level.
Some people however prefer to argue instead of learn, nothing new there.
โJul-17-2019 04:46 PM
AJR wrote:
I donโt know about all the above said. I do know in my two class Cs with only the engine AC working. The cab and the living space up to the kitchen area were cooled. Past that when I stopped I had to turn on the coach AC to get the bedroom cool also with the house AC. I do insulate the cab from the house when stopped.
When I had a class A I had to run the house AC on the road when driving into the sun. The chassis AC did not compare to the AC in a class C.
Just me experience with a gasser Class A.
โJul-17-2019 04:23 PM
โJul-17-2019 03:49 PM
โJul-17-2019 05:06 AM
Bordercollie wrote:
That's pretty amazing, the engine driven AC compressor doesn't diminish gas mileage. OK, that's good to know.
โJul-16-2019 08:19 PM
โJul-16-2019 05:18 PM
Bordercollie wrote:
I guess we have a choice to believe the conclusion of "somebody's" test a few years back vs some "expert's" silly statement about use of RV generator and roof AC. It would probably be difficult to get reliable results comparing gas mileage with generator running vs use of dash AC, but we could try it on long runs over relatively flat land.
โJul-16-2019 02:58 PM
โJul-16-2019 01:14 PM
JaxDad wrote:Bordercollie wrote:
"Dave", the generator expert at Smith Powerhouse, Inc, recommended using the RV generator and roof air conditioner while underway as the generator uses a lot less gasoline than the dash AC requires.
I'm not sure how much faith I'd put in an "expert" that makes such silly statements as that one.
A basic 4kw genny at idle uses 0.3 gallons per hour, 0.5 at half load.
I saw a test a few years back where they concluded thata V10 in a large vehicle would consume an extra 1% in fuel. That makes sense since they figure an econo-box will use an extra 3% with A/C on, smaller engine, proportionately larger load.
If an RV then gets (for easy math) 10 MPG, running the A/C compressor will decrease that to 9.9 MPG if said RV is going 60 MPH then it will use 6.06 gallons per hour instead of 6 gallons.
If somebody thinks 0.3 to 0.5 gallons is "a lot less" than 0.06 they're no "expert" in my books.
A politician maybe, but NOT an expert.
โJul-16-2019 12:27 PM
Bordercollie wrote:
"Dave", the generator expert at Smith Powerhouse, Inc, recommended using the RV generator and roof air conditioner while underway as the generator uses a lot less gasoline than the dash AC requires.
โJul-16-2019 08:46 AM
โJul-15-2019 05:28 PM