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Andy
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Location: Texas
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Topic: Refrigerator at high altitude Posted: 23 Aug 2018 at 10:42pm |
The Dometic brochure for the refrigerator in our trailer (2017 179) indicates there may be problems at altitudes above 3,800 feet. Just this weekend we went to northern New Mexico at about 9,600 feet and never could get the gas operation started. the ignition would fire but the furnace never started. The water heater and stove worked with no problems. Another R-Pod was camped in the same area and after several tries got his going. When I returned to El Paso I was able to get it working on the gas option. We have camped several times at altitudes of ~ 6,000 feet with no problems.
Any thoughts on how to overcome this limitation? We will be going out for about 2 weeks the end of September and will be at similar altitudes.
Thanks,
Andy
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Olddawgsrule
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 9:52am |
Definitely following this thread! I'm headed above 6,000 myself in a couple weeks!
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john in idaho
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 9:57am |
Any spider webs or wasp nests around the burner? I usually start our fridge in the driveway at home (2620 ft) and it stays running till we get home. The highest elevation might be around 9,000 ft.
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Andy
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 10:46am |
I guess I'm a little bit anxious about dragging the Pod with the gas burning; I know it's done all the time but still... What do you do when you have to fill the TV? Do you turn off the Fridge?
I did not have any bug nests or anything that might have prevented it from lighting.
Since it lit when I got back home the only thing I guess is that it had to do with altitude.
Thanks for the info
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furpod
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 12:12pm |
Originally posted by Andy
I guess I'm a little bit anxious about dragging the Pod with the gas burning; I know it's done all the time but still... What do you do when you have to fill the TV? Do you turn off the Fridge?
I did not have any bug nests or anything that might have prevented it from lighting.
Since it lit when I got back home the only thing I guess is that it had to do with altitude.
Thanks for the info |
Since the pod has a 3-way fridge, most tow in 12v mode. Verify your particular tow vehicle sends the proper voltage and amperage to the Pod while underway. If it does, 12v and avoid the worry..
If it doesn't, use propane, and don't worry. The RVIA reports the most common cause of RV fires is the 12v system, not propane.
If it's a trip under 4 hours, I probably wouldn't worry about traveling with the fridge cooled, loaded, and shut off. Use a remote thermometer to keep track of things, and don't worry.
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Olddawgsrule
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 2:09pm |
Originally posted by john in idaho
Any spider webs or wasp nests around the burner? I usually start our fridge in the driveway at home (2620 ft) and it stays running till we get home. The highest elevation might be around 9,000 ft. |
John, you play in the altitude in question. Seems you run continuously. Can it be or could it be if you don't there could be an issue?
If I read it right, his stove still worked. So it seems a bit strange the frig did not lite.
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Olddawgsrule
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 2:47pm |
1/2 dozen or so folks responsed on the other Rpod site I'm on. Folks have camped up to 10k without issue. The statement back is probably a clogged line. They also mentioned Spyder webs.
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Wood River Pod
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Location: Wood River, ID
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 3:50pm |
Greetings from Ketchum, Idaho, elevation 5,853 feet above sea level. We camp in our surrounding mountains with elevations well in excess of 6,000 ft. We have never had a problem with the gas option on the fridge at home or up in the mountains.
Thanks
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Andy
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 4:31pm |
Thanks to all for the info. Here is a reply from Dometic today: Thank you for contacting Dometic. The orifice behind the fridge that allows gas to pass through to get to the burner is only rated up to 5500 feet. There is no guarantee that your fridge will NOT work up that high. But if it does, it might/will struggle to stay lit, if it lights at all. There is no fix for that. We only offer one sized orifice. Jon CustomerSupportCenter
Phone (800)544-4881 customersupportcenter@dometic.com Dometic North America So it looks like this will be a hit and miss situation.
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john in idaho
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Posted: 24 Aug 2018 at 4:39pm |
Back when I had a pickup camper years ago, I had to twist the propane tank around to get it in place. The repair guy at the RV place told me to never tip a propane tank on its side, because liquid may get into the out let and freeze, cutting off the flow when you turn the tank on. I don't know how true that is but I have always been careful. Could you have tipped your tank on its side after filling it??
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