โNov-30-2020 05:12 AM
โDec-01-2020 03:15 PM
Cmccain13 wrote:
man there is so much i need to learn, i guess alot of it will be through here and then trial and error lol. I want to go through this and make no mistakes but i think that will be an unrealistic expectation.
โDec-01-2020 06:38 AM
Cmccain13 wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
Went winter camping in Yosemite for about a week on those temperature ranges with exposed pipes underneath with no problems.
Oh this is great, this is where i am going in September and was worried about that place as well. ๐ thanks
โDec-01-2020 06:24 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:
Cory,
You have a lot of very good advice here.
The hose is a real favorite of mine. I missed that once and DW and I had to carry the rigid 25' hose out into the sun without bending it and then carry it back to the tap so we could put water pressure on it and get liquid in it so I could drain and roll it up. If you band a frozen hose, they often crack. I wish I could have figured out how to save all the cylindrical ice cubes......
Another thing I carried from sailing that served me well was to always have provisions for 3 days. That means food, water and fuel. When we used to travel in the late part of the year, we often had to hold up a day for weather. One time, it was two. The storm was only one day, but it took another day for things to be clear enough that we would not be in the way of people that had to be out there.
Be ready for few open camp grounds and many with no water available.
Matt
โDec-01-2020 06:22 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Cmccain13,
Below 27 F you need to start taking precautions.
There is a wonderful thread in the full time forum on Winter camping.
My personal 'best' is -34 F.
โDec-01-2020 06:20 AM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
Went winter camping in Yosemite for about a week on those temperature ranges with exposed pipes underneath with no problems.
โNov-30-2020 08:44 PM
โNov-30-2020 11:37 AM
โNov-30-2020 09:29 AM
โNov-30-2020 08:20 AM
โNov-30-2020 08:18 AM
โNov-30-2020 07:31 AM
DrewE wrote:
I don't think it will be a big problem; how cold you can reasonably go depends on the design of the motorhome. If you have enclosed tanks (typically with a furnace vent outlet in the enclosure), you can go a lot lower than the high 20's with the heat on. If the tanks and plumbing are exposed to view underneath, it's much less cold capable. I think most motorhomes have enclosed pipes at the least.
The furnace does use a good bit of propane, but around 30 degrees outside it shouldn't need to work overly hard. Definitely keep an eye on the propane level and refill as needed. I could probably go a week or two under such conditions in my motorhome before needing refilling, and it doesn't have exceptional propane capacity or insulation.
awesome thanks for the heads up. I was reading and they said that electric space heaters weren't a good thing to use in an RV.
Be prepared for some draftiness and condensation on the windows. If you have an electric camp site (and I'd suggest that you look for them), running one or two space heaters, preferably on low, in the cool areas can help a lot with making things more comfortable and with reducing the propane consumption somewhat.
โNov-30-2020 07:24 AM
โNov-30-2020 06:33 AM
โNov-30-2020 05:57 AM
2112 wrote:I'm in a motorhome so it will be exposed kind of. if you mean non insulated.
Do you have an enclosed underbelly, or is this a motorhome?
โNov-30-2020 05:55 AM