โMay-14-2018 08:38 PM
โMay-21-2018 09:21 AM
โMay-21-2018 05:01 AM
rbpru wrote:
....snip....
The smart choice is to fully understand the nature of the problem before you sink big bucks in a difficult plan.
....snip
โMay-20-2018 10:40 PM
โMay-20-2018 07:06 PM
โMay-20-2018 07:04 PM
โMay-17-2018 01:38 PM
Mother.of.Dragons wrote:
?????? thank you for the comic relief in these doom & gloom posts!
Added info:
As I said, we DO intend to have this parked with all the hookups most of the time (electric, water, sewer - if we don't do the composting toilet), I already found a few parks that take travel trailers long-term.
And yes, part of the reason we want to tear out the walls is to re-do the insulation. I was looking at the spray foam. Maybe panel over the drywall for an extra layer too.
So the generator would be primarily used for its intended purpose, as a BACKUP unless we were traveling & stopped somewhere that it was A. allowed, & B. a necessity. The solar panels would be to supplement either of these primary power sources. And I have a family member with experience installing them who said they would do it for me.
As far as the heating element, being in the coldest room in the house currently (it could potentially get down to 55ยฐ WITH baseboard heat on in the wintertime), we always were able to get it up between 60 & 70 in the room with a small electric "fireplace" look heater. One in the bedroom & one in the front room would surely suffice to heat the space. The dragons need at least 60ยฐ for a sleeping climate at night, and I also have ceramic night heat emitters for each tank on the coldest nights. In the daytime, the tanks basically heat the entire back side of the 3 bedroom rancher we currently live in (their daytime tank temps are 90ยฐ+), so I doubt we'll be cold along with the 2 space heaters and better insulation.
I will definitely look into double pane glass windows. Good idea.
The only thing I don't like about a regular mobile home is the fact that they cannot just be on a towhitch to move, considering they're a "wide load". So it defeats the purpose of being able to take your home with you on road trips & vacations.
And yes, we do plan to eventually move south. But our current job situation doesn't really give us both the option to transfer down south, so it will take finding new jobs together (or possibly jobs that don't require physical attendance, that we can telecommute or do online).
Hope that answers a few questions/concerns.
And this has been our dream for a few years now. Yes, we're aware we're downsizing, we embrace that. All about the simple life. And yes, we know we may be in for challenges with finding ways for this to work for full-time. We also embrace the journey.
โMay-17-2018 09:37 AM
Jebby14 wrote:
rent an apartment. live in it. buy cheap used camper for camping vacations. You will come out miles ahead and save a ton of time money and aggravation over your current plan.
โMay-17-2018 05:54 AM
โMay-16-2018 10:16 PM
jfkmk wrote:2oldman wrote:Mother.of.Dragons wrote:I hope so, because a trailer that small and without slideouts- you can't even pass each other in the hall. It's going to be very tight.
We are used to & comfortable with small-space living,
You must be huge! You can't pass each other in a 35' trailer??? My wife and I had no problem in a 17 footer. I realize it wasn't full time living, but still!
โMay-16-2018 08:16 AM
โMay-16-2018 07:27 AM
toedtoes wrote:
In her second post, the OP mentioned having a generator as back up for the solar. However, I think for a PA winter, that might get expensive trying to heat the trailer with gas or diesel. Especially with three dragons to be concerned about.
How are you going to ensure the heat doesn't go out during the day when you're at work?
โMay-15-2018 08:37 PM
Mother.of.Dragons wrote:rexlion wrote:
My suggestion: if you plan to tear out and renovate, why not start with an empty shell? Buy a new cargo trailer and build the interior you desire. You can install thicker insulation (most travel trailers are poorly insulated) and it will be more comfy for climate control. Choose your heater and A/C, install windows, design a custom layout. Much easier to begin with a clean slate! Have a look at some of the build threads (with pictures) ***Link Removed*** .
I've considered this! Honestly got discouraged thinking about having to run all the plumbing & electrical from scratch by ourselves (we plan on doing all the reno's ourselves & we're both pretty handy but we're not plumbers or electricians, lol...)
Are there a lot of tutorials out there for this? I feel like it would all be pretty specific to the floor plan we'd decide on, as to where everything would need to be run & how it should be set up.
Also, honestly all the cargo trailer's I've seen for sale are twice or 3 times as expensive as the travel trailers I've seen (which makes no sense to me, considering, like you said, it's literally an empty shell).
โMay-15-2018 08:29 PM
โMay-15-2018 02:42 PM
2oldman wrote:Mother.of.Dragons wrote:I hope so, because a trailer that small and without slideouts- you can't even pass each other in the hall. It's going to be very tight.
We are used to & comfortable with small-space living,