Jun-14-2013 01:48 PM
Jun-16-2013 07:10 AM
4advtr wrote:
One other thing, we have two slides and I've noticed when the sun is on the side of the trailer with slides the slides act as radiant heaters. The insulation in the slide is nowhere near the roof of the trailer. The roof is several inches of foam and with the infrared thermometer on it in the heat of the day (108*) it'll read about the same as the interior temps, high 80's.
Jun-15-2013 10:09 PM
Jun-15-2013 09:07 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Is the foil on the outside or on the inside? How did you fasten it?
Jun-15-2013 07:27 PM
Jun-15-2013 06:24 PM
Jun-15-2013 08:56 AM
Jun-15-2013 07:49 AM
Jun-15-2013 07:37 AM
Jun-15-2013 07:15 AM
Jun-14-2013 07:46 PM
Jun-14-2013 07:28 PM
Jun-14-2013 07:22 PM
the bear II wrote:
We have a 15000 BTU DuoTherm in our 38ft 5th wheel. In up to 100 degree temps it will keep most of the 5th wheel at 78 or below during the heat of the day when the sun is overhead.
We had a 13.5 unit before and it would creep up to 85 at the hottest part of the day.
What we found works best is to leave the A/C on 24 hours a day and adjust the thermometer or put on jackets as you get cold. The goal is to keep everything inside as cold as possible so as the heat rises outside the A/C can maintain the cold better because the furniture, walls, counters are all cold already.
In addition our blinds are closed, we have awnings over all windows and our patio awning is deployed and dipped to keep the sun from shining onto the side of the trailer. The door stays shut as much as possible, kids and friends either stay in or stay out.
We also use portable fans to move air around to prevent hot spots. Or pointed at us if it gets uncomfortable inside.
Jun-14-2013 05:16 PM
BuckBarker wrote:
downtheroad has your answer to the AZ heat. Just make sure your extension cord is heavy duty.
Jun-14-2013 03:26 PM