It has been awhile since I last posted my results. I have worked on many phases concurrently and therefore had no real meaning results to report on anyone item. Then all of life's stuff gets in the way and then the waters opened up in the east which slowed things down. I am going to try and report on several stages in this one post rather then many posts.
GALLEYThe galley is about done where all I need to do is to cut, paint and add the shelves. And at the bottom right is the removable wall section which will allow for the sliding in of our 10 and 12 foot kayaks.
Water Inlet.I had no choice but to mount the water inlet high and on the front of the trailer. Not my ideal location, but stuff inside prevented any other solution. I think I will run some painted PVC tubing from the inlet down and to the tongue and hook the hose on to it there. Should look better.

The white pipes on the left are for my AC system. Like Shadow Catcher and others have done, my AC unit will be outside and under the back end of the trailer. I will run flex tubing from the AC unit to these tubes and into the cabin. They will be wrapped in aluminum bubble foam material to aid in the insulation. As noted in my earlier posts, I have proven that this will work for me with a 5,000 BTU AC unit. They can be removed.

Here are the adjustable inside duct vents:
PROPANEAdded tube through floor. Allowed for addition pipes and maybe a drain plug for later.
Pipe runs to front and turns to tongue. Oh and that is not rust on the bottom of the frame....just Virginia red clay splattered up from rains.


I will build a tongue box later for the propane tanks.
Scale so as to be measure propane consumption for heat tests.


Fresh Water Tank
Just a quick shot of my water tank. Tubing sort of runs everywhere. But it allows for hot water to be recycled back to the tank while waiting for shower water to work up. It also allows for campground water or off grid water with the turning of a valve.

Hot Water Tank Heating System.
Again, as noted in many earlier emails, I have dabbled with radiant in floor heating, taking my home experiences and taking them to the CT. Near the end I was ready to throw in the towel. Many dollars were spent and nothing seemed to come together. But within just he last week it all fell into place. I can say it works. I realize I have been testing it lately in warm evenings (down to 55 F) but it has heated my floors to 72 degrees F at the lowest heater temperature. I am not running a thermostat yet. I need to place my order for one now. The walls read 72, the ceiling read 72 and the ambient interior temp was about 68. Now radiant heat requires a long run time so as to heat the objects on the floor.
If I run the water heater at mid setting, I achieved about 80 degrees F on the floor surface.
Today I finalized the transmission cooler, computer type fan connections and was getting surface temps of 110 degree F on the surface of the cooler. Right now I have both systems running off of a small battery just for experimentation purposes. I need a cool night to capture and report on how effective it is. Also I need to find out what the AH usage is.
Here is the complex running of water tubes around the heater.


Solar pump

I will report back later with more results. Plus I will list my take on the "pros" and "cons" and I know there many.