โNov-03-2013 10:26 AM
โSep-27-2014 05:44 AM
โSep-27-2014 05:14 AM
dewey02 wrote:
Looks interesting, John and Angela. Would you provide a name of the product and/or a link? Thanks.
โSep-26-2014 11:23 PM
dewey02 wrote:
Looks interesting, John and Angela. Would you provide a name of the product and/or a link? Thanks.
โSep-26-2014 08:37 PM
โSep-26-2014 08:30 PM
โSep-26-2014 08:14 PM
bhh wrote:
Anyone used one of these for a heater when hooked to shore power? It would seem to be quiet, compact, and at 425 watts, plug friendly.
Envi Heater
โSep-26-2014 07:12 PM
โSep-26-2014 10:27 AM
โSep-26-2014 09:32 AM
โSep-26-2014 09:26 AM
โSep-26-2014 08:53 AM
Merrykalia wrote:
We were GIVEN one of those AMISH type heaters (brown box with quartz heater inside that doesn't get warm on the outside). We use that in our 5'er and it keeps it really warm without the dreaded condensation that you get with lots of other heaters.
โSep-26-2014 03:56 AM
poppin_fresh wrote:I use one of these, too. I don't have any electrical draw problems using 50 amp service and residential receptacles, all of them GFCI protected. Once my 22' TT is heated to comfortability, I set the thermostat down to a lower setting, drawing about 700W from the service. My TT is super-insulated and I live in MN, for reference.
We use a Honeywell Cool Touch Oscillating heater in our little hybrid. The last weekend we camped, it got down to the low 40's and even with a canvas bunk end we stayed completely toasty warm inside. That heater is especially nice since it can oscillate and blow warm air across almost 180 degrees.
In a larger trailer you might need more than one, but at long as they are on different circuits they should run just fine on 30A service.
โSep-25-2014 06:51 PM
โSep-25-2014 03:20 PM
gotsmart wrote:
The heater does not have a GFI plug.