Author |
Share Topic Topic Search Topic Options
|
tcj
Senior Member
Joined: 05 Jul 2018
Location: Central WA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 141
|
Topic: Dry Camping duration Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 10:43am |
Originally posted by Raven729
newbie : how do you "pre-load" the hot water heater? |
Water flows into the hot water heater when any hot water is turned on. When water flows out any hot water valve in the rpod, the water heater is full. If you use the fresh water tank pump to do this you then can put six more gallons into the fresh water tank.
|
2018 R-pod 180 Hood River Edition
|
 |
furpod
Moderator Group - pHp
Joined: 25 Jul 2011
Location: Central KY
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 6128
|
Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 11:27am |
Originally posted by tcj
Originally posted by Raven729
newbie : how do you "pre-load" the hot water heater? |
Water flows into the hot water heater when any hot water is turned on. When water flows out any hot water valve in the rpod, the water heater is full. If you use the fresh water tank pump to do this you then can put six more gallons into the fresh water tank.
|
This is ONLY if the WH bypass valves are set to summer/use/not bypassed.
.
|
 |
offgrid
Senior Member
Joined: 23 Jul 2018
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5290
|
Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 11:32am |
+ 1 to furpod. Also, once you fill the water heater once at the beginning of each season you will be carrying around 6 galons (50 lbs) of water until you pull the anode to drain it again. That 6 gallons is not useable, the total useable water dry camping in an rPod is 30 gallons and then only if you-fill all the water lines as well as the water heater, and then top off the water tank. The 36 gallons FR lists is misleading.
|
1994 Chinook Concourse
1995 RV6A Experimental Aircraft
2015 Rpod 179 - sold
|
 |
tcj
Senior Member
Joined: 05 Jul 2018
Location: Central WA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 141
|
Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 4:53pm |
You guys are making a simple task sound way to complicated.
|
2018 R-pod 180 Hood River Edition
|
 |
offgrid
Senior Member
Joined: 23 Jul 2018
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5290
|
Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 5:17pm |
Nothing complicated at all tcj, sorry if it came across that way. Just fill the water heater and hot and cold lines at the beginning of your camping season, fill the fresh water tank before each trip with as much water as you want for dry camping (up to 30 gallons), drain and winterize at the end of the season. Very simple.
|
1994 Chinook Concourse
1995 RV6A Experimental Aircraft
2015 Rpod 179 - sold
|
 |
Andy
Groupie
Joined: 11 Feb 2018
Location: Texas
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 65
|
Posted: 27 Feb 2019 at 5:31pm |
I would also add that the fridge is only "guaranteed" by Dometic to light below 5,000 feet elevation. Living in the Southwest we often camp at 8 or 9 thousand feet and learned the hard way that it wouldn't light at that elevation. So, we always run on propane starting at the house with a pre-cooled fridge and then it will stay lit at the higher elevations. We ran it constantly for 3 weeks last fall almost always above 5,000 feet with no problems. It used ~ 4 gallons of propane.
|
2017 179
2016 Silverado Z71
|
 |