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Wave Heater Install

Matho
Explorer
Explorer
I found a way to install my Wave Heater so it is off the floor.

The hose is T'd off of the stove and ran it through the stove floor using threaded PVC.


Then the hose runs to the front through the wall and mounted.




I found a TV mounting kit at Camping World that works.It slides out of the wall mount for travel and comes with two wall mounts if you needed another location.


Wall mount installed.




Now I use a aluminum baking sheet to mount the Wave Heater.




I used hex head bolts sized to fit in the mounting holes on the baking sheet. Used two nuts with lock washers to extend the hex head out just enough to mount the heater.


I made sure it had the correct clearance from the ceiling that are in the heater mounting instructions.


The baking sheet makes it easy to grab on to turn it in the direction you want.


At this location on my Northstar Laredo it's facing the bathroom.


This is it in use on a trip. The hose is coiled and works great in any position. The dogs (Golden Retrievers) can move inside the TC without getting burned. I like that it stays cleaner off the floor.


When not in use or just passing by I move it against the closet door.


On low with the Wave 6 I was getting 30 degrees warmer than outside temps with propper ventilation.

I'm very happy with this set up. So when I see the boondocking mountain snowman...I just Wave 6!
2015 Chevy 3500 SRW 4X4 6.0 CC SB Big Wig 2016 Northstar Laredo SC Off Road
26 REPLIES 26

noteven
Explorer III
Explorer III
Camp woof wrote:
Hmm, wouldn't it be nice if more TC makers used efficient heaters like Truma or Alde in the first place? Is Cirrus the only one?

Dave


Radiant heating could be installed throughout the ceiling of an rv. Stand in the sunshine to understand how this heat does not “rise”. Hot air rises.

Heat the floor underfoot and under the bed.

It could be zoned and supplemented with a couple blower heat exchangers for cool rainy mornings when you don’t want to warm the materials in the camper and for those who need to feel a draft down the neck in cold weather. 😄

Control air quality with a wee heat recovery ventilator.

Mello_Mike
Explorer
Explorer
Camp woof wrote:
Hmm, wouldn't it be nice if more TC makers used efficient heaters like Truma or Alde in the first place? Is Cirrus the only one?

Dave


No, BundutecUSA uses the Truma Combi in their truck campers. I wish I had the Truma in my Laredo. It would free up a lot of space for more important things like batteries or an inverter.

The CAT install in the OP is pretty clever. I like the articulating arm.
2016 Northstar Laredo SC/240w Solar/2-6v Lifeline AGMs/Dometic CR110 DC Compressor Fridge
2013 Ram 3500 4x4/6.7L Cummins TD/3.42/Buckstop Bumper with Warn 16.5ti Winch/Big Wig Rear Sway Bar/Talons w/SS Fastguns
My Rig
1998 Jeep Wrangler
US Navy Ret.

bigfootford
Nomad II
Nomad II
ICamel wrote:
When set on the low setting our Wave6 heater burns about 1/3 gallon of propane in 10 hours of use(verified by weight). We open two opposing windows and a roof vent 1/2 inch when using the cat heater. There is minimal condensation which collects in the window drains camping in weather where the outside temperatures reach mid 20's. The minimum inside temperature is in the upper 50's without using the camper furnace.

On another note, we have two CO monitors in the camper. One is an Atwood(Model# 32703) which is RV approved and has a digital readout. The Wave6 has NEVER caused the readout to register any CO level. Use of the oven without having the vent fan on is another story!


Never seen any Co readings on our monitors either... OH yea, just making coffee in the AM.... gets readings.

Jim
2000 2500 9.6 Bigfoot,94 F250, Vision 19.5, Bilstein shocks, air bags/pump, EU2000, PD 9260, Two Redodo 100ah Mini's, Aims 2500 Conv/Inv, 200W. solar, Morningstar Sunsaver 15A/ display panel, Delorme/laptop for travel, Wave-3 heat.

Camp_woof
Explorer
Explorer
Hmm, wouldn't it be nice if more TC makers used efficient heaters like Truma or Alde in the first place? Is Cirrus the only one?

Dave

ICamel
Explorer
Explorer
When set on the low setting our Wave6 heater burns about 1/3 gallon of propane in 10 hours of use(verified by weight). We open two opposing windows and a roof vent 1/2 inch when using the cat heater. There is minimal condensation which collects in the window drains camping in weather where the outside temperatures reach mid 20's. The minimum inside temperature is in the upper 50's without using the camper furnace.

On another note, we have two CO monitors in the camper. One is an Atwood(Model# 32703) which is RV approved and has a digital readout. The Wave6 has NEVER caused the readout to register any CO level. Use of the oven without having the vent fan on is another story!
ICamel

2017 Arctic Fox 992
2005 Ford F350 Lariat SuperDuty CrewCab 4x4 + 6 Speed Manual + 19.5" Tires + LoadLifter 5000 Rear Air Bags
2005 16' River Wild Drift Boat
Honda EU2000i
Trophytrout FlyFisherman

bigfootford
Nomad II
Nomad II
brholt wrote:
Question I would have is how much humidity issues do you have. Here in the Pacific Northwest humidity in winter is a big problem. We do pretty well with our double pane windows and a little venting but just running the stove or oven adds a lot of humidify. I would think that would be a problem with the Wave or Buddy heaters unlike the regular furnace.

Those of you that have them, what is your experience?


We have traveled and stayed in high humidity areas in the winter using our wave. Washington, Oregon etc..

Because it is radiant heat we usually can have the door open in 30 deg weather running the Wave 3 on high or low... Thus no more humidity than using a furnace and having the camper windows closed and all tight. Two humans and a dog can create a LOT of humidity..

We open a couple of windows and inch or more and the vent over our bed about 1", we like the fresh air and still being warm... If we were doing it just for safety we would not have them opened as far for sure....

Got to remember that the Wave 3 is sipping propane..... 3000BTU's on high will burn a gallon of propane... 92,000BTU's in about 30 hrs of steady use... and on low 1600BTU's about 58 hrs...

The oven/stove eats those BTU's... 6500 for the front burner and about 7200 for the oven.


Oh, and if your interested in BTU's the furnace we have is the big one... 35,000 BTU's!

Our fridges, running on Propane consume about 650BTU's/hr when cooling... Figure a 15 min duty cycle and you could say that our fridges, when fully cooled will use about 300-400 BTU's per hr.. You can do the math to tell how long your fridge should run on a gallon of propane...

Jim
2000 2500 9.6 Bigfoot,94 F250, Vision 19.5, Bilstein shocks, air bags/pump, EU2000, PD 9260, Two Redodo 100ah Mini's, Aims 2500 Conv/Inv, 200W. solar, Morningstar Sunsaver 15A/ display panel, Delorme/laptop for travel, Wave-3 heat.

brholt
Explorer II
Explorer II
Question I would have is how much humidity issues do you have. Here in the Pacific Northwest humidity in winter is a big problem. We do pretty well with our double pane windows and a little venting but just running the stove or oven adds a lot of humidify. I would think that would be a problem with the Wave or Buddy heaters unlike the regular furnace.

Those of you that have them, what is your experience?

jaycocreek
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have gone back and forth between the Wave heaters and the Buddy heaters.I used the Wave 3 in my prior lance truck camper mounted on the step to the bunk that the water tank was in.

I did not want to plumb into my 30ft trailer because all the plumbing was in the wrong spots so I went mobile with the Wave 8 on legs.It worked good.



I also use the Wave 8 in my house when the temps just are not cold enough for the wood stove.I still have the Wave 8 but it is to big for my lance pickup camper.



I used both the Wave 8 and Big buddy in my 21ft Class C because it had the room.



I put the little buddy or now called the portable buddy in my currant lance camper but I do not have a picture of it yet..Fits perfect wnd I am able to move it around to different locations.
Lance 9.6
400 watts solar mounted/200 watts portable
500ah Lifep04

Reddog1
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have had a Wave3 in my 11.5 Bigfoot TC since about 2005. Last year, I purchased an Alpenlite 19 5th wheel. I figured I could only use the TC or 5th wheel when camping, so I could save some money by moving the Wave3 to which ever unit I was taking camping.

The install in the Alpenlite 19 5th wheel went as expected. We went camping on the coast. I don't recall the temp, but it was not freezing. Early in the AM it was a bit cold with the Wave3 on high. It is obvious to me I need another Wave3 or replace the existing Wave3 with a Wave6.

I will add a second Wave3. With a Wave6 the temp setting would be 3200 to 6000 BTU/hr. With two Wave3 heaters, I would have greater control of the heat range, Adjustable from 1600 to 3000 BTU/hr. With both Wave3 heaters on maximum, I would have 6000 BTU/hr. A bonus is the ability to direct the heaters in different directions.


2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda

Toad: 91 Zuke

Dvoigt17
Explorer
Explorer
I installed Wave 3 in one of our lower storage doors. I removed the door, cut plywood the size of
door, cut out size of Wave 3 to offset it back into door. Added wood lip above heater to make sure that the refrigerator above the heater would not get excess heat. Stained new door and added extra hinges and door lock.


Added T into gas line with valve for heater.


I have purchased the Wave 3 cover to keep dust off of it. I’ve added this for the ski season and will most likely take it out and put the original door back on for the summer.

Coblue
Explorer
Explorer
I have the same Laredo camper and have been considering a Wave or Platcat- that was a clever solution for placing the heater, being able to direct it, and keeping it away from dogs.
2011 Northstar Laredo, 300w solar, CR110 Built to Boondock
2006 Ram 2500 CTD 4x4 Quad Cab Short Box, Bilsteins, Firestone Ride-Rites, 285/70-17s, AFE 4" cat-back, bixenon HIDs

Matho
Explorer
Explorer
bigfootford wrote:
OP, nice creative install!

Jim


Thanks.
I did see how you installed yours and that is a great way to do it. My TC is smaller and there is no room for that kind of install in it for the Wave 6.
Sometimes we have to improvise with TC's.That's why I like this style of RVing and the people that do it.
While other RV's are backing up Truck Campers keep going!
2015 Chevy 3500 SRW 4X4 6.0 CC SB Big Wig 2016 Northstar Laredo SC Off Road

Matho
Explorer
Explorer
AnEv942 wrote:
Clever...I wouldn't have thought to use an articulating arm for heater. Ours is wall mounted- having the ability to adjust direction would be nice.
Does the mount you used lock down for travel or do you remove?


The arm slides off the wall mount and I stow it in the closet. The Wave is put in the optional cover and back in the box it came in and stowed in the closet with the quick disconnect hose.
2015 Chevy 3500 SRW 4X4 6.0 CC SB Big Wig 2016 Northstar Laredo SC Off Road

OBSPowerstroke
Explorer
Explorer
I like the creative and very functional install! That Wave 6 should be more than adequate to keep a camper nice and warm in almost any temp. I have a Wave 6 that I use almost every trip in my 24 foot box travel trailer. When set to low, it will keep my trailer at 60 degrees with outside temps down to about 25 degrees. Often times I have to open a window just to cool off when outside temps are in the 40 to 50 range.
Josh
'16 Ford F350
'11 Komfort Resort 240RK
Portland, OR