โJul-13-2017 09:01 PM
โJul-14-2017 08:30 PM
โJul-14-2017 07:11 PM
sch911 wrote:
No problem! They run on an inverter. Which runs on batteries. In most cases can go several hours.
โJul-14-2017 05:03 PM
pnichols wrote:
Based on our experience with two motorhomes over the years (a 1969 Chinook and a 2005 Itasca), I don't understand the need for a compressor refrigerator instead of an absorption refrigerator in an RV. :h
โJul-14-2017 04:48 PM
โJul-14-2017 11:41 AM
naturist wrote:i watched them replace my glass and it's amazingly easy to crack one, that I doubt they will guarantee won't happen.MrWizard wrote:
X2 doors come off easy, made to be reversible,
just take the doors off
anybody with 'any' mechanical ability, can remove screws and remove a window and put it back
it doesn't take a $1000 service job to take out a window and lift a fridge in
s
Windshields, however, are not held in with screws. They are glued in and it's not so simple to remove and replace one.
โJul-14-2017 08:15 AM
naturist wrote:MrWizard wrote:
X2 doors come off easy, made to be reversible,
just take the doors off
anybody with 'any' mechanical ability, can remove screws and remove a window and put it back
it doesn't take a $1000 service job to take out a window and lift a fridge in
s
Windshields, however, are not held in with screws. They are glued in and it's not so simple to remove and replace one.
โJul-14-2017 07:24 AM
โJul-14-2017 07:20 AM
โJul-14-2017 06:30 AM
โJul-14-2017 06:17 AM
โJul-14-2017 05:48 AM
โJul-14-2017 05:37 AM
โJul-14-2017 05:35 AM
โJul-14-2017 05:33 AM
jerseyjim wrote:
Junk the Norcold, get a Dometic. Easy in, easy out. Stay with the gas/electric units designed for the bouncing around of an rv, plus....the electric goes out...whattaya' do with an "residential" unit?
That's why they're called "residential".