Mark519 wrote:Earnest, Thanks! The faucet and sink came from Amazon for $108: "Moen 22245 Camelot Stainless Steel 20 Gauge Single Bowl Drop In Sink with Faucet, Stainless" http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001009VGS/
Mark519 wrote:Hi Jerry,
I took the trailer out last weekend and it got down to low 30's and not above 50 with around 50% interior humidity. The Webasto heater kept it at 70 degrees and only burned one gallon of diesel. Any place that was not insulated got some condensation. I still have some unfinished metal ribs that go through to the interior and they got wet but not dripping. I found that a fan circulating the air inside helped eliminate chill spots, and I may install a second vent for the heater more in the middle.
I was sort of wondering how warm it would be without the heater running at all, just generating heat from your body, TV, Frig etc ...
I don't think there was any condensation behind the plywood although I guess that is possible if conditions are extreme enough. I did my best to block air in/ex-filtration by sealing each layer of polyiso and wood. I guess the rubber spray could be beneficial for some small amount of insulation but condensation could still form on rubber. And then it runs down inside the walls and has nowhere to go? I think the ultimate is a layer of polyiso over the interior plyood. Then paneling goes over polyiso. I would have done that myself but needed every bit of interior width with my 7' wide trailer.
I had the same space problem with adding 2 layers of stuff, so I did it your way too. I did however do the floor on the underside...but the metal ribs just transfer way to much heat and cold really fast. Since I have the extra wood flooring its ok to walk on barefoot at 40 deg coldest I have been in. BUT REALLY , next time I will go with 1/2" plywood, then 1.5 to 2" foam and a second layer plywood to do the floor. So you really need 7 ft interior height.
The floor was rather cold but not unbearable. I have considered 2" polyiso under the floor. My concern there is trapping moisture against the plywood and causing rot. Your floor tiles will eat up a lot of battery power, and I would worry about them failing and maybe burning but that is just me.
Well it has a thermostat so you can make adjustments and experiment around a bit & chose how much elec you wanna burn...so time will tell if and how it works, but the principal of heating the bed from the bottom should work ok![]()
Maybe you could put down polyiso inside on the floor followed by a layer of plywood to create the full box within a box. Some crush testing would be necessary to determine the thickness of polyiso and plywood. And there is additional weight.
I don't think the floor would get smashed down to much, the foam is pretty strong.
My ceiling could be improved by putting a full sheet of polyiso over the ribs and not fitting it between the 1/2" plywood "furring strips".
I am planning to put a second layer on my ceiling when I get around to it after some more foaming to the open ribs.
When the trailer is not heated or cooled I want the temp and humidity to be the same inside and out to prevent storage mildew. I installed a very low power ventilation fan in the ceiling (a slow computer fan). As a side effect it creates a slight positive pressure so the trailer should not draw up air from underneath it (exhaust). I was also concerned about being inside it and running "out of air" and I can run it while we are in there without adversely affecting the heating and cooling. So it stays on all the time.
Don't worry about running out of air, all those teardrop owners would be dead
I do have a frost proof faucet on the washdown spigot, and have the freshwater tank inside for greater freeze resistance. I tried to design it to be fully drainable but there would be water left in some areas and there is no easy way to remove pex crimps. My gray tank is outside but it can be left open or use antifreeze.
You could use one of those little Dremmel grinders to cut the PEX crimp bands. I will put the frost proof faucet on the list. Also I see some guys with the camping gas water heaters inside & I have lots of fans to move about 800 CFM
I don't have any windows although I might put one in the door (double glazed sealed).
I am not planning any windows as I have the 4 x DVR - 700 line infra red cameras and can see on my TV what is going on outside.
I have found some LED lights that are supper bright, can change to 20 colors including white & are dimable.
You might look into the diesel burning hydronic heaters like the Webasto TSL-17. I don't like propane either and one of these could do it all in theory.
My problems get even worse with the diesel stuff, I once was on a Diesel boat where the dumb ass captain drove into the wind & I almost dropped dead from sucking in all that nasty Diesel.... Anybody who does not believe sucking in to much Diesel won't make you sick, is beyond hope for me.
Make sure the trailer production manager knows EXACTLY what you want.
I only wanna ORDER the unit if I work with the right person directly, such as designer or Production manager, otherwise the whole project is a NO GO for me.
I already been there done that - with the 3 blind & dumb idiots down the line.
Thanks Jerry
Mark
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