โOct-08-2014 06:16 PM
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โOct-15-2014 05:24 AM
Big_Blue wrote:
Great first season in our 2008 Winnebago Destination/DP. Alas, winter will be coming to soon here to Maine. Due to other obligations, its time to put the toys of summer away now.
Winterizing the fifth wheel was easy. Drain the lines, put the pink in the lines, drive to winter storage location, remove battery and return in the spring.
Class As are a wee bit more complex. The research that I have done is primarily focused on draining the lines and putting the pink in the lines. I get that.
(I have located indoor winter storage for a reasonable rate. This opens the driveway up for safe snowblowing, et al.)
What about the diesel fuel in the tank? Leave alone or add the winter additive? Fill the tank or ????
The batteries are another concern. All the research says to charge them up monthly. Which assumes that there will be unfettered access. Unfortunately, that will not be the case. The batteries will be fully charged when the rig is put into storage.
What I'm thinking is to disconnect the house batteries from the coach. Setting the battery Aux Batt Switch to off. And return in the spring with a battery charger and good book to read while getting the charge back up to operational.
For those of you who do long term storage over the winter. What have you done? What have you learned? What are the dos and don'ts?
Tnx in Advance.
โOct-13-2014 06:26 AM
โOct-13-2014 05:39 AM
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โOct-09-2014 08:38 PM
RayChez wrote:Have a safe trip Ray! Take Care, Rooster
If I lived in Maine, I would do exactly what you are going to do. But I live in southern California and I use my coach year round. Just getting ready to go on another trip from California to New Mexico and back in about thirty days.
These coaches cost too much money to let them set. They need to be moving or else gaskets start to shrink and pretty soon you have oil leaks, cabinets drying up, tires get bad flat spots and cracks. And if your coach has a gasoline engine, gasoline starts to gel up and fuel injectors can go bad.
So anyways, my point is you should take it out for a drive every once in a while.
โOct-09-2014 07:07 PM
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