Quote:
Originally Posted by scapel
I also found that the hand bar on the screen door was handy.
I also attached a bungee cord to the door so the wind wouldn't blow it open and slam against the side of the trailer.
I had trouble with a jack not working correctly and found that the jack was under powered so had them put in an new one and no more problems.
This thread has some very nice comments. Thanks a lot.
Oh, I keep my trailer connected to electricity while it is stored in the back yard under a shed. Is it OK to let it stay plugged in to keep the battery charged. I also let the AC run on occasion during the summer and during the winter keep the temp inside the trailer at about 60 F.
I just run it on a 30 amp breaker.
Any comments are appreciated.
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Do you have a 25BH? You mentioned a bungee to keep the door from slamming against the side of the trailer. That isn't possible with mine. It has a gas shock at the bottom of the door so it only opens 90 degrees. Maybe you have a different year unless I am not understanding what you changed.
As far as leaving it plugged in. I left mine plugged in all summer. The one thing I am not sure about is if the converter is a float charger. While better to leave it charged than completely dead, I do like a float charger better than a constant charge. A float will let the power drop a bit over time. I would imagine the converter is just always charging. Like I said mine was plugged in all summer. We did get out so probably it wasn't harming it at all. When we went out we are dry camping quite a bit so that does cycle the battery.
You mentioned running the AC at winter. Now I do get that you are down south and I am in Minnesota. But running the AC for us in the winter is a big no. I get that you are using it for dehumidifying the camper. We use one of those big DampRid containers. The ones about the size of a gallon of ice cream. This is good for us in the winter but when it is really cold out we don't get much for humidity. So I don't know if that would last you. What about getting a plug in dehumidifier. Not cheap to run but you could set the humidity level that you want so it would just cycle. Maybe dumping into kitchen sink or bath tub. I doubt over the course of a winter you would fill the grey tank like this. Just a thought since it sounds like you might keep it plugged in anyhow.
I guess the biggest concern I have about running the AC, again coming from up north, is that it is hard on an AC and refrigeration in general running it when it is cold out. It doesn't work right. Maybe a cold winter day is in the 70s. Well then nevermind. It is warm enough to run it. If it was in the 50s well that is a bit on the cool side to be running an AC unit.