โOct-09-2018 09:04 PM
โOct-14-2018 05:58 AM
GordonThree wrote:KM Rolling wrote:pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Replace the return air grill for the furnace with a twin window fan. I have mine on a thermostat at the water pump. It draw a scant 27 watts so is easily run on an inverter.
Interested in this, can you explain in more detail, and/or do you have some photo's?
KM,
Does your trailer have duct heat?
โOct-14-2018 05:58 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Here is an example of what I use:
dual fan
I've tested this to -27 C (-17 F)KM Rolling wrote:
Interested in this, can you explain in more detail, and/or do you have some photo's?
โOct-14-2018 05:57 AM
pianotuna wrote:
For a long thread on winter camping surf here:
https://forums.goodsamclub.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/24160748.cfm
โOct-13-2018 09:29 PM
โOct-13-2018 09:25 PM
TurnThePage wrote:
pianotuna, I'm completely missing your point. It looks interesting, but what does that do to prevent freezing in the plumbing of an unheated RV?
โOct-12-2018 11:29 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Replace the return air grill for the furnace with a twin window fan. I have mine on a thermostat at the water pump. It draw a scant 27 watts so is easily run on an inverter.
โOct-12-2018 03:07 AM
โOct-11-2018 07:32 PM
โOct-11-2018 07:09 PM
โOct-11-2018 07:04 PM
โOct-10-2018 11:53 AM
โOct-10-2018 08:11 AM
swimmer_spe wrote:Add heat or drain the water out of the lines is really the only option. Zero to 60 psi will not significantly affect freezing.
I plan on using my trailer well into November. I want to still use the water system without a burst pipe.
Typically, it does get a little below freezing. Besides draining the lines, or keeping the furnace going 24/7, how can I reduce the chances of ice forming in the lines?
Would it be better if the lines were under pressure or not?
In short, I don't want to winterize the water lines yet, nor do I wan a burst pipe.
โOct-10-2018 07:23 AM
KM Rolling wrote:pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Replace the return air grill for the furnace with a twin window fan. I have mine on a thermostat at the water pump. It draw a scant 27 watts so is easily run on an inverter.
Interested in this, can you explain in more detail, and/or do you have some photo's?
โOct-10-2018 07:21 AM