โJul-11-2016 07:25 PM
โJul-12-2016 02:33 PM
greenrvgreen wrote:
I may just try a heat bulb inside the AC ceiling intake!
โJul-12-2016 12:20 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
I plug in a small electric heater. That forces the air conditioner to run and act as a large dehumidifier.
โJul-12-2016 11:47 AM
โJul-12-2016 11:12 AM
โJul-12-2016 10:13 AM
โJul-12-2016 07:52 AM
โJul-12-2016 06:59 AM
greenrvgreen wrote:
The AC I'm asking about is the Coleman Mach 1 power saver 11k btu, with separate thermostat.
โJul-12-2016 06:43 AM
โJul-12-2016 06:33 AM
โJul-12-2016 06:26 AM
โJul-12-2016 05:54 AM
GordonThree wrote:Probably generates enough heat to keep the AC running too.
So I bought the biggest dehumidifier I could find for cheap (90 pint) and it runs along with the AC. Makes the cabin nice and comfy quickly.
โJul-12-2016 05:49 AM
greenrvgreen wrote:
I ask because I want to prevent the AC from blowing humidity back into the cabin when the compressor cycles. IMO humid air is uncomfortable no matter how cool it is. I would rather make the cabin too cold and then shut the AC off manually, and then restart the AC manually after the head pressure has bled off.
The AC I'm asking about is the Coleman Mach 1 power saver 11k btu, with separate thermostat. Gordon's info on jumpering the thermo wire is just the kind of idea I'm looking for. As an alternative, if there was some simple way to make the wall thermo think it was 80* when it was actually 60*, that would be even better.
โJul-11-2016 10:21 PM
โJul-11-2016 10:04 PM