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Creekside Outdoors RV owners - freezing temps

rstiphout
Explorer
Explorer
Own a 2013 Creekside 26BKS; would like to know if anyone with similar rig has camped in temps in the teens or twenties (Fahrenheit)with full water tanks and done OK? The Creekside has covered insulated bottom and heater blows air below the floor to keep it warm; but no heating pads on the tanks. If I keep the thermostat inside at 60 deg F, can I expect the water tanks and pipes to stay liquid?

Feedback much appreciated from folks who have actually tried it ...

Rick
8 REPLIES 8

Majja13
Explorer
Explorer
My weekender is not nearly as nice as your creekside and I do a 10 day elk hunt where oftent the highs are just above freezing. Mine has done ok, the only issue was the first year I had left the bathroom door clsed and the line got a bit of ice in it where if feeds the toilet. By the tiem we had arrived back form the morning hunt witht he thermostat left at 50 and the door open it was free flowing again. I think you would be fine as long as you were not parking it and leavig for a week or two with no heat inside.
2015 GMC Sierra 2500hd 6.0 w/4:10 rear end
2006 SkyLine Weekender 180
1200/12000 Equal-i-zer WDH

BillB800si
Explorer
Explorer
We've been caught in some cold temps ( had to disconnect water lines) in West Yellowstone. What I vividly remember was listening to the furnace go on & off all the time. Wasn't pleasant....
Bill B. (S.E. Michigan)
2015 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 4x4 Hemi
2016 Rockwood Windjammer 3029W

CavemanCharlie
Explorer III
Explorer III
I don't have a unit like your and I don't get to go camping in cold temps. But, on here I have read some people having condensation problems on the windows when it gets cold. Do a search on this website for solutions people have come up with.

rstiphout
Explorer
Explorer
Many thanks to all of you for taking the time to respond. This is very helpful - I think we will go ahead and try some cold weather camping and not worry too much about using the fresh water tank down to the teens.

Will consider all the very thoughful points you have made... Especially, the rate of use of propane (we have double tanks with auto switchover)!

Regards to all, and enjoy RV'ing

Rick

brulaz
Explorer
Explorer
Old-Biscuit wrote:

...
At night we would set t-stat for 58*F and open all kitchen/bathroom cabinet doors. Then come morning we'd crank the heat up to 68*F and close up cabinet doors.
Only thing.......went thru 30# propane cylinder every other day.
BUT you need to use that RV Furnace to get that warm air where needed.


This is pretty much what we did with our Outdoors RV Timber Ridge when boondocking. But we also have a heat pad when on 110V which is nice.

And also like Old-Biscuit says, find out where the pump is and open that area up too. Ours was enclosed but easy to access for winterizing.

This summer I want to open up the belly and see just where they have the water lines running underneath.
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow

GHCreekside
Explorer
Explorer
I've never camped quite that cold but it did get down into the teens here last month and so far my Creekside has not been affected by it. If you're using the water and keeping the furnace on it should be fine. By the way it's good to see another Creekside owner on here.
2006 Dodge 3500 QCLB SRW 4x4 5.9 Cummins
2002 Bigfoot 1500FS

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
Not a Creek side but our 5th wheel has an enclosed underbelly with bubble sheet type insulation and heat duck blowing into waste tanks/fresh water tank---valve area.

Spent a week in -14*F temps......only problem we had was suction line to on-board pump frozen until I opened access door to that area from inside rig. Then all was well.

At night we would set t-stat for 58*F and open all kitchen/bathroom cabinet doors. Then come morning we'd crank the heat up to 68*F and close up cabinet doors.
Only thing.......went thru 30# propane cylinder every other day.
BUT you need to use that RV Furnace to get that warm air where needed.
Is it time for your medication or mine?


2007 DODGE 3500 QC SRW 5.9L CTD In-Bed 'quiet gen'
2007 HitchHiker II 32.5 UKTG 2000W Xantex Inverter
US NAVY------USS Decatur DDG31

jaycocreek
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have a similar setup without insulation between the cover and tank. Never had a problem until last year, froze it up and luckily it was not full. 20 degrees and above isn't bad but getting below say 15 degrees or so requires some extra thought into keeping it from freezing.

If your staying in it is one thing and if your just leaving it unattended is another.

Mine freezes at the pump,which is enclosed next to the bed and under the bathroom sink and with that in mind, I can live in it down to about 15 degrees without freezing, below that, we blow out the lines and use a porta-potti and water jugs to well below zero. Each trailer is different when it comes to really cold temps.

Good luck.
Lance 9.6
400 watts solar mounted/200 watts portable
500ah Lifep04