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HEAT

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2011 1:29 pm
by Shadow Catcher
I did not know quite where to put this and it is getting past the need to use, but here is the finished, almost project of setting up an Espar heater to use with our teardrop. It does use diesel but prefers kerosene (burns cleaner).

The package
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The fuel tank has the fuel pump attached, it will go inside the case.

What is inside
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The wiring harness is over long but I will not be trimming it till I can fit it and try in out with CR (Compass Rose).

With ducts attached
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It all fits inside, mostly except for the ducts. The white thing is a pump primer made with a blinker relay and switch. The Espar pump is metering pump and since I have a long fuel line that is removed the heater wants to time out if it does not see fuel with in a specified time. This lets me know that I am getting fuel to the furnace (fuel line is translucent).

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2011 6:26 pm
by 48Rob
Interesting...

Thank you for the explanation and (good) pictures! :thumbsup:

Since it is in a case with a handle, may we assume it is designed to be portable?
If so, why?

I recall you mentioned in an earlier post that this model is no longer available, are there any similar units on the market?

Rob

PostPosted: Sat Apr 30, 2011 7:46 am
by Shadow Catcher
The case is an aluminum surplus night vision goggle container which came in olive drab and that I stripped and polished. The Espar heater is the current D2 version and is available.
The reason I wanted it portable is that I can leave it home, and it helps to heat the garage. I do not have room in the tear. One other reason is this will be much more quiet, the reason for the muffler is that these things sound vaguely like a jet engine when starting up and having everything external and self contained reduces noise.
I have 4" deck plates in the side of the teardrop and these accommodate the AC unit and with reducer the heater. Note that the connector is a 3" sewer hose connection but the orange duct is high temp. The output from the heater is about 300 degrees F on high.

PostPosted: Sun May 01, 2011 9:15 pm
by bdosborn
Wow, that's a cool setup. Where did you get the fuel tank? The priming thingy is cool, I never would have thought of that.

Bruce

PostPosted: Sun May 01, 2011 9:40 pm
by Shadow Catcher
The fuel tank is an OLD Chrysler outboard tank I found on Ebay for $10 stripped of its camouflage paint and painted Ford blue. It had a funky plastic handle I replaced with aluminum. The fun part was fitting a valve and hose barbs. One inside the tank for the fuel pickup tube and the valve and hose barb to fit the Eberspacker fuel pump, all found at the local Triad/Parker store plus a threaded fitting to match the tank.
I still want to figure out a way to protect the fuel pump (expensive little buggers).