โNov-27-2014 09:00 AM
โNov-27-2014 03:46 PM
โNov-27-2014 03:16 PM
โNov-27-2014 03:15 PM
bobinyelm wrote:These specs are for the older, discontinued, 8xx series Coleman Mach Power Saver. The newer 9xx series have much lower LRA/running amps (see my previous post for the 9xx series specs).dahkota wrote:The Locked Rotor Amps is pretty high for a Honda 2000i, and the running wattage is awfully close to the max wattage to the max for the genset, which I'd like to avoid.
Coleman Mach 3 p.s.
Mach 3 PS Specs
โNov-27-2014 02:17 PM
dahkota wrote:
Coleman Mach 3 p.s.
โNov-27-2014 02:11 PM
jrnymn7 wrote:
Or maybe a window shaker installed on the roof, ducted in?
I got lucky and found a brand new Danby 5100 for $50, and installed it in its own duct system, but it really struggles once the temps get over 95F. I'll be adding some 12v fans to help with its fresh air and exhaust air movement. My camper's all metal, so that doesn't help either. The OP's unit is fiberglass? So that would help. But at those Texas Temps...
โNov-27-2014 01:07 PM
โNov-27-2014 12:55 PM
โNov-27-2014 12:34 PM
โNov-27-2014 12:22 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
300 watts to run my laptop? Dang! I gotta be quick and unplug this sucker!
โNov-27-2014 11:48 AM
bobinyelm wrote:IMO, you should be much more concerned about the LRA (locked rotor amp) rating, and not the BTU rating. The LRA rating determines whether your Honda EU2000i will start a given a/c unit.
I am looking for a power-miser roof A/C to replace my 13,500 BTU roof air the PO of my well-insulated BigFoot truck camper installed (throwing out the perfectly good OEM 7700 BTU unit).
He did it for "instant cooling" with hook-up campgrounds, but I want a unit that my little Honda 2000i genset can easily handle boondocking.
The smallest I can currently find is a Coleman 9200 BTU unit, so I'm hoping someone here may have an alternative.
Bob
โNov-27-2014 11:19 AM
โNov-27-2014 11:16 AM
โNov-27-2014 10:59 AM
โNov-27-2014 10:35 AM
Porsche or Country Coach!
If there's a WILL, I want to be in it!
โNov-27-2014 09:39 AM