Aug-05-2018 06:02 PM
Sep-01-2018 09:25 AM
Sep-01-2018 08:20 AM
SoundGuy wrote:heyobie wrote:
Last year I used the kitchen stove to take the bite out of the air.SoundGuy wrote:
A dangerous practice to be sure. :EMuddydogs wrote:
Why? In the spring and fall I do it all the time, trailer is a little cold in the morning its time to make some coffee and as a side effect the heat takes the chill off. Throw some biscuits in the oven for breakfast and she warms right up. Running the oven to cut a little chill is no different then cooking something or using the oven as a warming tray with the door cracked open a little while finishing up a meal.
A little late to reply but I just saw this and find it hard to believe anyone could be so naive. :R A burning propane flame generates CO which can kill you ... recommend this practice and one could wake up dead one morning. :E There's a BIG difference between running a propane furnace which is vented to the outside world and using a stove / oven which is not externally vented for heating the interior of a camper. The difference is venting - whenever you run the stove / oven you want to vent the trailer by ensuring windows are open and the stove vent fan is venting any CO produced to the outside, not the inside where it can concentrate and ultimately kill you. 😞
Sep-01-2018 03:45 AM
heyobie wrote:
Last year I used the kitchen stove to take the bite out of the air.
SoundGuy wrote:
A dangerous practice to be sure. :E
Muddydogs wrote:
Why? In the spring and fall I do it all the time, trailer is a little cold in the morning its time to make some coffee and as a side effect the heat takes the chill off. Throw some biscuits in the oven for breakfast and she warms right up. Running the oven to cut a little chill is no different then cooking something or using the oven as a warming tray with the door cracked open a little while finishing up a meal.
Sep-01-2018 01:09 AM
Aug-06-2018 06:56 PM
Aug-06-2018 01:29 PM
Aug-06-2018 01:01 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Another NO.
You might be able to use 16.5 volts to charge with the "right" equipment But even then the charge acceptance rate is limited by the chemical reaction. For example, at 85% state of charge the battery can accept only 15 amps--anything more than that merely causes the cells to gas (bubble) excessively.
I
Aug-06-2018 11:01 AM
Aug-06-2018 11:00 AM
Muddydogs wrote:SoundGuy wrote:heyobie wrote:
Last year I used the kitchen stove to take the bite out of the air.
A dangerous practice to be sure. :E
Why? In the spring and fall I do it all the time, trailer is a little cold in the morning its time to make some coffee and as a side effect the heat takes the chill off. Throw some biscuits in the oven for breakfast and she warms right up. Running the oven to cut a little chill is no different then cooking something or using the oven as a warming tray with the door cracked open a little while finishing up a meal.
Aug-06-2018 10:45 AM
SoundGuy wrote:heyobie wrote:
Last year I used the kitchen stove to take the bite out of the air.
A dangerous practice to be sure. :E
Aug-06-2018 09:47 AM
heyobie wrote:
Where do you use Coleman sportcat? It seems so small. I assume you place it in the bedroom.
Last year I used the kitchen stove to take the bite out of the air.
Does anyone use kerosene heaters. I have a large one I used to use to heat my daughter's grooming shop. It can heat.
Aug-06-2018 09:30 AM
Aug-06-2018 07:28 AM
valhalla360 wrote:mowermech wrote:
Another possibility is to buy a high output (not one of the little 6 amp units) battery charger, hook it to your house battery and plug it in while running the generator for an hour or two.
More batteries will help last overnight, but the re-charging problem remains the same.
Actually a larger bank really helps out because it can absorb greater amps.
If your batteries are only absorbing 10amps from the 40amp charger...adding a 6amp second charge won't gain you anything.
Aug-06-2018 06:32 AM
Aug-06-2018 05:24 AM