doug hodder wrote:Bob Henry has a great little stove that he uses in his "Chubby". It's a miniature pot belly type stove. I've built a number of smaller wood stoves for shop use and have given some thought to actually making up a really tiny one, but the problem is keeping it fueled all the time. I've also thought about some sort of a stove type item that would be fueled on briquettes.
I'll probably stick with warming up the trailer on cold nights with the Coleman lantern, (yes I do vent the trailer) then shutting it down once the walls and interior are up to temp. for the night. Once you get the interior warmed, it stays pretty warm, at least till I fall asleep. Doug
Dirke wrote:Since most people have campfires when they camp, has anyone ever tried heating rocks and then putting them in the teardrop? It might not be a bad way to go, no CO2, no flames, no drain on the battery and the best thing of all... free! You could even make a box to put them in so they won't get the camper dirty. Then for entertainment you could ask it a lot of easy questions to find out just how dumb a box of rocks really is.
On a side note, I remember my grandpa heating up an old fashioned iron in our pop up camper. I don't know how long the heat lasted but it helped take the chill off a bit. Although I think he may have been ignoring the "not for comfort heating" warning on the stove.
_Ryan_ wrote:I have heard talk of using a lantern to heat a trailer but it has always seemed like tempting fate between the heat, fuel, and carbon monoxide gas. Is there a good way to do this safely? Am I just paranoid?
Cheers!
doug hodder wrote:Bob Henry has a great little stove that he uses in his "Chubby". It's a miniature pot belly type stove. I've built a number of smaller wood stoves for shop use and have given some thought to actually making up a really tiny one, but the problem is keeping it fueled all the time. I've also thought about some sort of a stove type item that would be fueled on briquettes.
I'll probably stick with warming up the trailer on cold nights with the Coleman lantern, (yes I do vent the trailer) then shutting it down once the walls and interior are up to temp. for the night. Once you get the interior warmed, it stays pretty warm, at least till I fall asleep. Doug
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