deltabravo
Dec 23, 2019Nomad
Very good video on Buddy Heaters
I just stumbled across this video on Buddy Heaters.
ARE BUDDY HEATERS SAFE IN AN RV? WE ASKED A FIREFIGHTER
I agree with the two people in the video - me personally, I won't use one. I'm the ultra paranoid type when it comes to life safety - what "could" happen? I call it Risk Mitigation.
Another reason I wouldn't buy one is because it's one more piece of equipment to deal with.
Here's my method of heating the RV when cold weather camping while boondocking / remote camping:
Lock my EU2000i to a tree at the end of a 50 foot extension cord and run a small space heater that has three wattage settings on the lowest setting (600 watts). If I fill the generator with gas before I go to bed, it will run all night.
Doing this burns about 1 gallon of gas, and likely ends up being more economical than running a Buddy heater all night.
The generator scenario won't work in a campground though due to quiet hours, etc.
Well, you are probably asking yourself "Why not just run the furnace?"
People look for alternate methods of heating for several reasons:
Cost reduction (RV Propane furnace consume a lot of propane)
Noise Reduction (RV Furnaces make a lot of noise - it wakes me up multiple times at night in my very small RV, which is a truck camper)
Conserving battery power. (RV furnaces use a lot of battery power)
In below freezing temps, running the furnace some is going to be a must if your RV has heated underbelly - this keeps the water lines from freezing, etc.
Anyway, food for thought.
ARE BUDDY HEATERS SAFE IN AN RV? WE ASKED A FIREFIGHTER
I agree with the two people in the video - me personally, I won't use one. I'm the ultra paranoid type when it comes to life safety - what "could" happen? I call it Risk Mitigation.
Another reason I wouldn't buy one is because it's one more piece of equipment to deal with.
Here's my method of heating the RV when cold weather camping while boondocking / remote camping:
Lock my EU2000i to a tree at the end of a 50 foot extension cord and run a small space heater that has three wattage settings on the lowest setting (600 watts). If I fill the generator with gas before I go to bed, it will run all night.
Doing this burns about 1 gallon of gas, and likely ends up being more economical than running a Buddy heater all night.
The generator scenario won't work in a campground though due to quiet hours, etc.
Well, you are probably asking yourself "Why not just run the furnace?"
People look for alternate methods of heating for several reasons:
Cost reduction (RV Propane furnace consume a lot of propane)
Noise Reduction (RV Furnaces make a lot of noise - it wakes me up multiple times at night in my very small RV, which is a truck camper)
Conserving battery power. (RV furnaces use a lot of battery power)
In below freezing temps, running the furnace some is going to be a must if your RV has heated underbelly - this keeps the water lines from freezing, etc.
Anyway, food for thought.