cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Air conditioning performed admirably.

TurnThePage
Explorer
Explorer
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.
2015 Ram 1500
2022 Grand Design Imagine XLS 22RBE
13 REPLIES 13

poppa
Explorer
Explorer
we are getting old before our time charlie.

CavemanCharlie
Explorer III
Explorer III
mdcamping wrote:
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

Older refrigerants were more effective at cooling but were phased out for atmosphere damage reasons.


He says it's 17 years old. That makes it a 2004. The older refrigerants were phased out long before 2004.

Actually 2004 is when R22 started getting phased out and it wasnโ€™t until 2010 that new equipment couldnโ€™t use it. Plus RVโ€™s can be built with older inventory so itโ€™s totally possible it was using older refrigerant.


based on what I remember 2009 was the last year that new equipment could be shipped with R-22, starting in 2010 you could still purchase new split central air A/C units for R-22 but they had to be shipped with nitrogen...This is as I remember when I installed Central air in my last house in 2010, I just went with 410A. I going to guess the rest of the industry probably followed similar timelines.

Mike


OK, I thought that it was before that. Thanks for the info.

philh
Explorer II
Explorer II
Bring back R12!

mdcamping
Explorer
Explorer
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

Older refrigerants were more effective at cooling but were phased out for atmosphere damage reasons.


He says it's 17 years old. That makes it a 2004. The older refrigerants were phased out long before 2004.

Actually 2004 is when R22 started getting phased out and it wasnโ€™t until 2010 that new equipment couldnโ€™t use it. Plus RVโ€™s can be built with older inventory so itโ€™s totally possible it was using older refrigerant.


based on what I remember 2009 was the last year that new equipment could be shipped with R-22, starting in 2010 you could still purchase new split central air A/C units for R-22 but they had to be shipped with nitrogen...This is as I remember when I installed Central air in my last house in 2010, I just went with 410A. I going to guess the rest of the industry probably followed similar timelines.

Mike
2022 F-150 3.5 EcoBoost 4X4 Supercrew GCWR 19,500 157WB
Payload 2476 Maxtow 13,800 3.73 Equalizer 4 Pt Sway Hitch
2017 Jayco Jay Flight 24RBS
Old TV, 07 Toyota Tacoma, Double Cab, Factory Tow Pkg, retired towing at 229K. (Son now owns truck)

wnjj
Explorer II
Explorer II
CavemanCharlie wrote:
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

Older refrigerants were more effective at cooling but were phased out for atmosphere damage reasons.


He says it's 17 years old. That makes it a 2004. The older refrigerants were phased out long before 2004.

Actually 2004 is when R22 started getting phased out and it wasnโ€™t until 2010 that new equipment couldnโ€™t use it. Plus RVโ€™s can be built with older inventory so itโ€™s totally possible it was using older refrigerant.

CavemanCharlie
Explorer III
Explorer III
wnjj wrote:
CavemanCharlie wrote:
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

Older refrigerants were more effective at cooling but were phased out for atmosphere damage reasons.


He says it's 17 years old. That makes it a 2004. The older refrigerants were phased out long before 2004.

wnjj
Explorer II
Explorer II
CavemanCharlie wrote:
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

Older refrigerants were more effective at cooling but were phased out for atmosphere damage reasons.

mdcamping
Explorer
Explorer
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


Most likely built in the good old days of R-22 ๐Ÿ˜‰ glad everything worked out

Mike
2022 F-150 3.5 EcoBoost 4X4 Supercrew GCWR 19,500 157WB
Payload 2476 Maxtow 13,800 3.73 Equalizer 4 Pt Sway Hitch
2017 Jayco Jay Flight 24RBS
Old TV, 07 Toyota Tacoma, Double Cab, Factory Tow Pkg, retired towing at 229K. (Son now owns truck)

CavemanCharlie
Explorer III
Explorer III
TurnThePage wrote:
These unheard of high temps presented me with an opportunity to test out the A/C in my old trailer. The ducted Coleman Mach III is 17 years old, as is the 24' stick and tin trailer it's installed in.

With temps hovering around 108 inside and out, I was hopeful but not very optimistic. The trailer was about 3/4 shaded. After one hour, interior temps had already dropped almost 15 degrees. After two, the interior temp was 80 - 82 depending on where measured. At that point I was feeling a little guilty about hogging power and shut down my little experiment.

I'm very happy with the results and am no longer nervous about adventures to the south in the summer.

Based on some of the stuff I've read here, I thought it was worth sharing.


They built Air Conditioners better back then. I don't know how or why but the old ones work better then the newer ones. The new ones are probably more electric efficient though.

mr_andyj
Explorer
Explorer
3 of us had no problem with the AC keeping us cool in 120 UT heat in the summer, in a black camper. Key is insulation and cubic feet of cooled space. We only cooled the front part and the roof had 5 inches of insulation.
We got back around 3pm and turned on the AC and it cooled quickly.
Windows are modest size, except the windshield, but we put cardboard on the camper glass while gone to keep heat out. Kept the van windows cracked and the curtain closed to keep cabin heat out of the camper, and kept the roof vent open and fan running while we were away.

Many of you have large spaces, poorly insulated walls and roofs and lots of window glass. Good luck is all I can wish you...

ReneeG
Explorer
Explorer
We have a 2011 Bighorn, sitting beside our house in full sun. It's been 100 - 106 here and it's fully packed for a trip including the fridge, so I keep the AC running. It keeps it at a good 20 degrees cooler than the outside temp with just one AC running. We only have 30amp at home so can't run both AC's at the same time, but the one does just fine to keep the fridge at a good temp.
2011 Bighorn 3055RL, 2011 F350 DRW 6.7L 4x4 Diesel Lariat and Hensley TrailerSaver BD3, 1992 Jeep ZJ and 1978 Coleman Concord Pop-Up for remote camping
Dave & Renee plus (Champ, Molly, Paris, Missy, and Maggie in spirit), Mica, Mabel, and Melton

Kavoom
Explorer
Explorer
I had a pop up for 13 years where they "accidentally" installed an airconditioner on it and so didn't charge me, It was a beast that would keep the pop up cool in 98 degree humid Missouri heat. They really built them back then... I have a picture of the old black lab standing at the door with his nose touching in that heat. He was like I want to go inside. It was still working when I sold it with the only maintenance being to clean it every year or so. Never touched it otherwise. It would even start on a Westinghouse 2000 genset (without any slow start help) at 4500 feet here where I live in MT. That goes against everything I've read...

Having bought a new TT in early March (28 ft, one slide), I also have been testing major systems. I noticed a new airco system on mine I hadn't seen before called an Evolution that appears to be a newer version of the dometic brisk air 13,500. One thing is that it is unbelievably quiet from the outside. Sitting under the awning, I could hear everyone elses airco but not mine 10 feet above my head. I got to test mine at the new Wingate campground at the Utah Dead Horse Point state park. We pulled in at like 99 degrees and I fired it up and it cooled things down within a half hour with the main vent opened, then went to the dispersed. The dogs layed under it loving it. It hit 75 within 40 minutes. Interestingly, the bathroom vent blows best and will freeze the bathroom if closed. The others blow about half to three quarters of it. So, we keep the bathroom open as it blows into the main area.

I had a 22 footer TT for three years (that traded at what I bought it price) that had a small side mounted residential like airco and it did fine but took longer to cool than the new one being like 8600. It never got tested quite as much as this last run a few weeks ago to the Moab area.

wildtoad
Explorer II
Explorer II
Good numbers.The importance of shade canโ€™t be overstated. Try that test again in full sunlight to see how it will perform.
Tom Wilds
Blythewood, SC
2016 Newmar Baystar Sport 3004
2015 Jeep Wrangler 2dr HT