After digging around on various forums that had A/C topics, I found that the answer is "mixed air." Remember, most of these units are 5K BTU or greater designed to cool +/-300 cu ft. Our campers are anywhere from 10 to 20% of that number. That means you have to trick the A/C unit into working longer to dehumidify the interior air. I turn on my A/C on low cool with the thermostat set at about 2/3 to 3/4 cool. I put my roof vent on positive flow (pushing outside air in from the top) on the next to the lowest setting and crank the cover open about an inch. I gap my side windows open an inch, as well, to allow the excess air to escape. That brings in about the right amount of warm outside air and pushes it down to mix with the cooled inside air to keep the compressor running longer. The result is cool, dry air inside where you want it! Yes, depending on your camper's interior space, outside ambient temperature, and how humid the outside air is, you might have to play with fan settings and gaps of the vent/windows. In hot arid climes (with low relative humidity) you don't have to worry about the damp air, but you will want to shade the A/C unit to protect the condenser coils from the sun's radiant heat. That helps the heat exchange of the coils of the A/C work better. I did Palo Duro Canyon State Park in June of 2025. The daytime temps were in the 100s. When the wife went inside for a nap after lunch, I noticed the air "coulda been cooler" in the camper. I grabbed a spray bottle with water and spritzed the coils periodically. The evaporative effect of the water cooled the coils and improved the efficiency of the A/C. By nightfall, the temps were in the 60s, so we didn't need the A/C.
So...you can get an A/C to provide cool, dry air as long as you can balance the inside and outside air to fool the compressor into running a longer cycle.