May-16-2017 06:24 AM
May-16-2017 09:07 AM
pianotuna wrote:Yes, frozen water lines can cause hidden damage that can lead to delamination. I'm surprised you of all people didn't know that. Or maybe you was just reading out of context?
So freezing causes delamination?????
If the OP wishes to be careful he can leave the thermostat set to the lowest possible temperature.
Realistically even an RV that is not designed for cold weather use is fairly safe at 25 f (-4 c), so long that is a low temperature for the day and day time temperatures are well above freezing.troubledwaters wrote:
Yes, you risk damaging the water lines. The risk is directly proportional to how cold it gets for how long. Even 30° for one hour can freeze those tiny lines. Will that damage them? Who knows. How about providing some supplemental heat, or blowing out the lines but no antifreeze? Or just wing it. The risk is pretty low, but the other side of the coin is it could result in hidden damage that causes big problems like delamination down the road. No easy answer. Easy for me to say take a chance cause it ain't mine to pay to fix down the road. So do you feel lucky today?
May-16-2017 08:51 AM
May-16-2017 08:41 AM
troubledwaters wrote:
Yes, you risk damaging the water lines. The risk is directly proportional to how cold it gets for how long. Even 30° for one hour can freeze those tiny lines. Will that damage them? Who knows. How about providing some supplemental heat, or blowing out the lines but no antifreeze? Or just wing it. The risk is pretty low, but the other side of the coin is it could result in hidden damage that causes big problems like delamination down the road. No easy answer. Easy for me to say take a chance cause it ain't mine to pay to fix down the road. So do you feel lucky today?
May-16-2017 08:03 AM
rhagfo wrote:Reading comprehension 101.troubledwaters wrote:
Yes, you risk damaging the water lines. The risk is directly proportional to how cold it gets for how long. Even 30° for one hour can freeze those tiny lines. Will that damage them? Who knows. How about providing some supplemental heat, or blowing out the lines but no antifreeze? Or just wing it. The risk is pretty low, but the other side of the coin is it could result in hidden damage that causes big problems like delamination down the road. No easy answer. Easy for me to say take a chance cause it ain't mine to pay to fix down the road. So do you feel lucky today?
Really??
Seem it takes at least a couple hours to make small ice cubes when the freezer is a zero or even -10 degree F.
Part depends on daytime temps, if daytime gets to high 40's or low 50's shouldn't be an issues even down to about 28 degrees. If you look at hourly temps likely only below freezing for about 2 to 4 hours, the trailer is a heat sink, and will hold the daytime heat.
May-16-2017 07:51 AM
May-16-2017 07:47 AM
May-16-2017 07:42 AM
May-16-2017 07:37 AM
troubledwaters wrote:
Yes, you risk damaging the water lines. The risk is directly proportional to how cold it gets for how long. Even 30° for one hour can freeze those tiny lines. Will that damage them? Who knows. How about providing some supplemental heat, or blowing out the lines but no antifreeze? Or just wing it. The risk is pretty low, but the other side of the coin is it could result in hidden damage that causes big problems like delamination down the road. No easy answer. Easy for me to say take a chance cause it ain't mine to pay to fix down the road. So do you feel lucky today?
May-16-2017 07:25 AM
May-16-2017 07:12 AM
May-16-2017 06:55 AM
May-16-2017 06:31 AM