Sep-04-2020 09:03 AM
Oct-19-2021 06:44 AM
richclover wrote:memtb wrote:
Howdy Rich, Glad that you had a good outing! Were any animals harmed during your outing? :B memtb
Wife and I went for the camp, don’t need the groceries. Others, however, were successful in saving a few from suffering through another winter.
Oct-19-2021 05:18 AM
memtb wrote:
Howdy Rich, Glad that you had a good outing! Were any animals harmed during your outing? :B memtb
Oct-18-2021 06:38 PM
Oct-18-2021 05:01 PM
Oct-14-2021 07:59 AM
free radical wrote:memtb wrote:magicbus wrote:memtb wrote:free radical wrote:
Fwiw
Ive been down to minus 20 with no problems,..
This is another testimony, that all campers/rv’s are not created equal. While you will use considerably more propane, especially if the rv is large (ours is a 39 foot 5th wheel), the are several (some of the best are no longer in production) that can handle -20 F quite well.
Uh... when a Canadian poster mentions -20, my guess is they would mean -20C, not -20 F. A small but important difference.
Dave
Dave, after I made my post, and then saw his location.....I wondered if he was talking about -20 C. Yep....a fairly significant difference!
With our first really good 4 season unit, we enjoyed several minus 30 F mornings with no issues, with our newer unit, I’m not certain how well it would handle the -30’s F.... -20’s, we’re good! memtb
Haha you make it sound as if minus 20 Celsius is fun !
-20 C is - 4 F btw
At those temps water in the river froze one foot thick. 🙂
Id highly recomend diesel heater Espar or its much cheaper Chinese copy.
See Foresty forest chanel he uses that one full time living in some arctic conditions.
It blows dry hot air so no problem with moisture like propane does.
One can also burn kerosene in those things.
Oct-13-2021 03:51 PM
K3WE wrote:Just running the furnace or some other supplemental heat?
Last year our plumbing froze at 25 degrees (Camper supposedly winter-capable)
Oct-13-2021 03:19 PM
Oct-07-2021 04:03 PM
Oct-05-2021 01:59 PM
Oct-03-2021 04:04 PM
memtb wrote:magicbus wrote:memtb wrote:free radical wrote:
Fwiw
Ive been down to minus 20 with no problems,..
This is another testimony, that all campers/rv’s are not created equal. While you will use considerably more propane, especially if the rv is large (ours is a 39 foot 5th wheel), the are several (some of the best are no longer in production) that can handle -20 F quite well.
Uh... when a Canadian poster mentions -20, my guess is they would mean -20C, not -20 F. A small but important difference.
Dave
Dave, after I made my post, and then saw his location.....I wondered if he was talking about -20 C. Yep....a fairly significant difference!
With our first really good 4 season unit, we enjoyed several minus 30 F mornings with no issues, with our newer unit, I’m not certain how well it would handle the -30’s F.... -20’s, we’re good! memtb
Oct-03-2021 11:34 AM
Deb and Ed M wrote:
Same for us - even though RVs boast about "heated tanks" - most dump pipes and low-point drains are still exposed to the cold. We regularly camped in sub-freezing temps as we traveled from Michigan to Florida in January. Our black and gray tanks were exposed to the cold (no heaters) and we never had any problems as long as ample antifreeze was dumped down the drains. Obviously, we used the campground showers.
Oct-03-2021 10:23 AM
wing_zealot wrote:Yes and it is high time for the OP to update how the trip went 😉
You three realize this post is a year old right? I pretty sure he’s figured it out by now.
Oct-03-2021 10:11 AM
Old Days wrote:
We camp in cold weather, but I winterize the camper and buy windshield washer fluid to flush the toilet. We bring bottled water to drink and make coffee. I have fixed broken plumbing in a camper before and getting to some of the fittings is a pain. So we don't take any chances.
Oct-03-2021 06:15 AM
wing_zealot wrote:
You three realize this post is a year old right? I pretty sure he’s figured it out by now.