rbpru wrote:
Like the kids say,” It is easier to ask forgiveness than permission in the first place.”
Personally, I would park it until I got the information I needed or until someone said something. Then, I would tell them, “ It is a good thing that that rule does not apply to TTs”.
Of course that is why I live on the back side of a 20 acre cornfield. Some of us are just not meant to live with civilized people.
I rarely use ther propane side of my frig. We could get by with an electric only model.
As others have mentioned, that IS a really bad idea when owning a home that is under a HOA.
HOAs will SPELL OUT VERY CLEARLY WHAT CAN AND CAN NOT BE DONE with concerns about the exterior and grounds of a home and property.. When buying into a HOA area you ARE REQUIRED TO SIGN AN AGREEMENT STATING YOU UNDERSTAND AND WILL FOLLOW ALL RULES IN THE HOA AGREEMENT.
If the agreement states no RVs to be parked anywhere on the premises then by golly you better darn well FOLLOW THE RULES and NOT PARK IT ON THE PROPERTY!
This isn't something that you do then ask for "forgiveness" for, doing so will have ALL of the folks under that HOA GUNNING FOR YOU.. In effect they WILL HARASS YOU AND MAKE YOUR LIFE A LIVING NIGHTMARE UNTIL YOU MOVE OUT (they CAN do that)..
Why would you INTENTIONALLY cheese off the neighborhood that YOU bought into and agreed to the rules?
I personally stayed away from any property which had deed restrictions or HOA covenants so I don't have to worry about a neighbor deciding they didn't like the color of my vehicle and harassing me for it..
As far as the OPs original problem with the fridge, it is a older fridge, if more than 10 years old there is no way I would personally spend $500 plus time putting a cooling unit in it.. That fridge is past it's lifetime and needs put into the scrap heap.. There is OTHER expensive and possible hard to find parts in that fridge that may or may not be bad and you may not find that out until the cooling unit has been changed.
Buying a USED RV fridge is a really scary proposition.. Pretty fair chance you will get a dud..
First order of business is to see if you can start it up on electric or propane.. Some of the older fridges did not have an electronic circuit board.. Those are nice since they do not require 12V to run..
I would try propane first if you can't get any electric hook up..
If burner fires up and the fridge does not start cooling within 8 hrs or you have a strong smell of ammonia then the cooling unit is done.
If you can't get burner to start then you will have to find out why and fix it..
Honestly, if cooling unit is done, buy a new RV fridge or if not doing much boon docking (camping without commercial power) then a small home fridge might be a good choice..