โSep-11-2017 12:30 AM
โSep-12-2017 09:09 AM
โSep-12-2017 06:17 AM
nycsteve wrote:
I don't know if this catches you before the storm hits but here is what I did in Sandy and Irene both of which I was in the camper for. I got the wind direction prediction from the NOAA site which is hour by hour. Go to the 7 day forcast type in the zip of where your at. In the lower right of the page click on the graph. With hourly acurrate prediction of wind direction I was able to keep turning the truck to face the wind. I picked the local high school lot as it offered building shelter on one side and a sturdy chain link fence on the other. My thinking was the fence would catch any blowing debris. Also made sure no trees or power lines where close. No structure on nearby roofs to blow off and hit me. I kept the jacks up so not to stress them with the constant rocking. As long as your mostly pointed into the wind you should be fine. Plus I had wifi till the power went out from the school ๐
Good Luck!
โSep-12-2017 01:48 AM
โSep-11-2017 09:43 PM
โSep-11-2017 08:48 PM
Kayteg1 wrote:
We drove today back to Houston (we left Houston just days before Harvey going to Florida).
Downtown is on our schedule for tomorrow, but 100 miles east, city of Orange has nice areas with huge number of RV parks. Driving by them it is sad to see trailers resting on their slides, or one park inside the other.
But judging from pile of construction debris in front of each house, the resident are getting back to their life.
We also passed tens and tens of boom trucks going east. Most of them are electrician's truck, but some of them were tree removal trucks.
Looks like Florida is already having lot of help on the way.
Bad part, looks like 50 miles east of Houston one of boom truck driver had to fall asleep. He went via 100 ft of shoulder and made deep cut into the woods.
At the time we passed the scene, the helicopter was already waiting.
โSep-11-2017 06:35 PM
HadEnough wrote:
Also, the truck camper took the storm much better than anticipated. According to the weather I had up to 62 mile an hour wind and it did shake and feel scary a couple times, but it wasn't even enough to touch the jacks to the ground. And they are only a few inches off the ground. That wind came at between 60 and 45 degrees to the truck.
So I can say without a doubt that the Arctic Fox on a Dodge Ram 2500 can easily withstand 60 mile an hour winds without being anywhere near tipping over.
At least one good data point.
Who is going to do the next test? You have to go at higher wins than this. So we can see where they get scary. ;). Ha ha ha
โSep-11-2017 04:58 PM
โSep-11-2017 03:40 PM
โSep-11-2017 03:37 PM
โSep-11-2017 01:05 PM
โSep-11-2017 12:13 PM
โSep-11-2017 11:40 AM
โSep-11-2017 11:29 AM
jimh425 wrote:HadEnough wrote:
I've never even used my awnings.
I'm talking about the slide awnings not "side" awnings. If you did unroll the side awnings, you wouldn't have to worry about them long because they'd leave you.
โSep-11-2017 11:13 AM
HadEnough wrote:
I've never even used my awnings.