โNov-06-2015 10:17 AM
โNov-08-2015 07:36 AM
โNov-08-2015 06:59 AM
Timtation wrote:CavemanCharlie wrote:
I would blow the lines out. It's easy to do. Then do it again on your way back.
As for your furnace, if you only have one 12 volt battery like most TT's have and the furnace is running constantly as you go down the road you will drain the battery quickly and then have no heat anyway.
Hook up your trailer connector and the TV will charge the battery and provide 12VDC to the fan. BUT, the heat losses due to wind will probably empty the tanks pretty quickly.
โNov-07-2015 04:08 PM
CavemanCharlie wrote:
I would blow the lines out. It's easy to do. Then do it again on your way back.
As for your furnace, if you only have one 12 volt battery like most TT's have and the furnace is running constantly as you go down the road you will drain the battery quickly and then have no heat anyway.
โNov-06-2015 06:36 PM
WNYBob wrote:
I would winterize twice, cost of rv antifreeze is a lot less than cleanup of frozen pipes or replacing a hot water tank.
โNov-06-2015 04:05 PM
โNov-06-2015 02:54 PM
WNYBob wrote:
I would winterize twice, cost of rv antifreeze is a lot less than cleanup of frozen pipes or replacing a hot water tank.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โNov-06-2015 02:31 PM
โNov-06-2015 01:27 PM
Dick_B wrote:
From Indianapolis to Florida you might get away with not winterizing on the way down. You just have to watch the night time temps. Ditto on the way back.
BTW, have you ever lost heat in the barn?
We do that trip from Chicago late December and come back the first week in February and winterize before each trip.
โNov-06-2015 12:06 PM
โNov-06-2015 11:56 AM
โNov-06-2015 11:30 AM
87bob wrote:Yes. It always operates on 12v and lpg.
.. the furnace operation. Will it operate only on 12 volts and LPG while driving?
โNov-06-2015 11:29 AM
โNov-06-2015 10:57 AM