First trip with new FWC Fleet – review and lessons learned

EnviroProf

Advanced Member
Joined
Jul 7, 2017
Messages
96
Location
Western Pennsylvania
Hi all, I drove from Pennsylvania to Bozeman, Montana, to have my new Fleet (front dinette) installed and then continued on to the West Coast and back for a shakedown cruise. I thought I’d share some thoughts and experiences. Maybe this will be useful for those considering a pop-up truck camper. For a reference point for my observations, I have previously traveled and camped for several years in a 1989 VW Syncro Westy camper.

Total miles driven with camper: 4,100
Nights camped: 14 (trip was 30 days and included bunking with relatives)



Steven installing camper in Bozeman.

Solar
I had all of the solar gear with me and installed it in a friend’s driveway after I picked up the camper. Luckily I learned from the threads on this forum and pieced together all of the gear I needed beforehand.
Victron MPPT 100/30 solar controller
Victron BMV 700 battery monitor with Bluetooth dongle
Grape Solar 180 watt panel mounted on Yakima tracks
Zamp semi-flexible 100 watt panel stored under mattress


On the road in Montana on first day. Steven told me this is the first silver fleet with matching silver doors for the various appliances.

Initial issues
There was a small propane leak when I filled and connected the tank. I immediately returned to the Bozeman shop and Steven quickly replaced the leaking fitting and I was good to go. I do have an issue with one of the stove burners that will have to be sorted out. The directions call for holding the knob down for about 8 seconds when you light. While one burner lights correctly this way, the other sometimes takes several attempts before it will stay lit. Anyone have this issue?


Coolest campground on trip in Jedediah Smith Redwood State Park.

Fleet review
After a month on the road with the Fleet I am very happy with its performance. I wanted to find its limits on this trip, so used everything to its full extent to determine battery storage, heating, propane efficiency, etc. In other words, I used everything and didn’t worry about conserving.

A typical day included running the hot water heater once a day and running the furnace each night set to about 64. The temperatures at night ranged from high 40s to a low of 14 one night camped in Wyoming. I had several nights with temps in the 20s. I did order the thermal pack and was glad that I did. I ran the hot water heater each night when I camped so I could wash dishes and found that I still had warm water in the morning. With this type of use I went six nights before emptying the first tank. Cost to fill at a store in the boonies was $5.50. Best money ever spent. As I climbed in elevation on the return trip and the temperatures dropped I left the furnace on and set at about 48 during the day and left cabinets open while driving to prevent any freezing issues with the water system.

The solar worked about how I expected, with the batteries dropping to 78-80% each night and then pretty quickly climbing to 100% via the 180 panel and driving. Camped in Jedediah Smith Redwoods, with virtually no sunlight hitting the panel because of the big trees, the batteries dropped to 56% after two nights. As I wanted to test the limits, I was not trying to conserve at all, charging the laptop, and running anything that I wanted to, including the furnace fan, vent fan while cooking, etc. My guess is that if I had been trying to conserve and with warmer temperatures, I could have squeezed a third night out of the batteries without dropping below 50%.


Awoke to this on the Smith River in Jedediah.

Pickup camper vs. VW Westy
The Fleet has more floor space and much better bunk space than the Westy, as long as you only need one bed. The Fleet also has more total volume, more storage space, and much more counter space.

The Westy space is much more accessible. Let’s face it. Climbing in and out of the small Fleet door is a pain. In the Westy you can see better from inside and it’s easy to keep track of dogs, kids, etc., from inside the van with the big sliding door open. I felt more isolated and shut in when inside the Fleet.


Mt Olympus in Olympic National Park.


Also ran into my almost twin in Olympic. Never met the driver but the truck was carrying Oregon plates.

Most painful lesson learned
Smashing my pinkie finger when lowering the roof in the dark early in the morning before coffee. To be fair, I was warned by Steven to keep fingers away. My dog learned some new words that morning . . .


Coldest temps were found in Wyoming near the Colorado border.


And one final photo from the salt flats near Great Salt Lake.
 
Thanks for the report. Your photos are great and inspiring. I recently purchased a Woolrich Edition Hawk and will be taking it on its first shakedown trip to Yosemite for a week. I’m also interested in battery and propane consumption. My camper has two batteries and since the weather is supposed to be cloudy and cold I won’t be getting much help from the 160 watt solar. I purchased a 90 watt P3 Solar rollable to supplement the roof panel. I’ll probably be driving the truck every other day to keep the batteries up if necessary. I’m looking forward to reporting back with my findings.
 
Nice report and beautiful photos. Making your camper your own and ironing out the wrinkles. Fun all around. Happy motoring!
 
Thanks for the kind words folks. I appreciate all the advice I received on this forum as I was deciding which options to order, how to install the solar, etc.
 
rollinrollinrollin said:
Thanks for the report. Your photos are great and inspiring. I recently purchased a Woolrich Edition Hawk and will be taking it on its first shakedown trip to Yosemite for a week. I’m also interested in battery and propane consumption. My camper has two batteries and since the weather is supposed to be cloudy and cold I won’t be getting much help from the 160 watt solar. I purchased a 90 watt P3 Solar rollable to supplement the roof panel. I’ll probably be driving the truck every other day to keep the batteries up if necessary. I’m looking forward to reporting back with my findings.
I will be curious to see how much better solar performance I see when I use the camper with full summer sun, rather than low-angle October sun in the cloudy PacNW. What was really useful to me was the Victron battery monitor with the bluetooth. This allowed me to learn how much power was being drawn each day. It was also useful to see how much the truck was charging while driving and how the solar was charging when parked. It also has alarms you can set when the charge drops to a certain point.

As far as propane consumption went, I was glad to have the two tanks instead of one. It's difficult to determine how much propane you have in a tank for sure and you don't want to run out in the middle of the night with temps in the 20s if you only have one tank. This did happen to me on the trip and it was nice to know that I had another full one sitting right next to it.
 
Great shakedown trip. Your going to love it once your body memory adjusts to the size of the door. I'm 6 foot 1 inch and after 5 years in the Eagle I hardly ever "wack" my head. Just learned to go out backwards. Side benefit you will have to keep your weight down to fit.

Fleet looks good on the 4-door Tacoma too.

Happy camping.
 
Great trip and nice report. Welcome to our group. Mount Olympus is now on our radar screen. Thanks for sharing. Happy camping. jd
 
Great post...always interested to hear about "shakedown cruises"... we also have a new Fleet but have only had shorter "shakedown trips" -- 2 to 3 days in milder climates in Oregon this summer/fall ...

A few questions and suggestions:
1) Solar power/propane/outdoor temp monitoring--have started a log monitoring several systems: propane use, solar use--highs/lows (estimated), fridge/heater settings, hi/low outdoor temps..etc.--these are the main uses/numbers I chart all in a 4x6 spiral notebook...an excellent way to see the trends/monitor use and recovery settings and a great way to "get to know" our camper per the uses and conditions...charting in the notebook has become a daily habit for each day's outing...

2) Leaving your heater on while traveling in cold climate? did this help or could you get by w/out running the heater in 20s to 30s outdoor running temps? especially with a hot water heater (we do NOT have a hot water heater, so might be recommended for us when traveling in colder temps) how did you "keep your cabinet doors open"? while running to "heat" your pipes? Have other 4 wheel owners done this while traveling to safeguard freezing pipes?

Love to hear your thoughts and other member's comments .... thanks

Brad in Scappoose, OR
 
Scappoose Brad here again...

Regarding knowing how much propane is left in your tank, I have "solved" this problem by:

1) buy a digital luggage scale found on Amazon--Grawor Digital Hanging Luggage Scale ($12)... (get a digital scale--uses 2 AAA batteries, more accurate than the manual scales which I already tried)
: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01GFOBEVS/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

2) after doing the math, I made the following chart(below) that adds the weights of the empty tank(Tare weight) plus propane(11#s full), I taped this chart to each propane tank in my camper...(when you fill your tank, the chart and scale will also allow you to double check that a vendor has fully filled your propane tank)

If you weigh your partially filled propane tank with the above luggage scale, look at the chart, you will know what percentage of propane remains in your tank... easy, peasy...

I believe each of the 2 propane tanks 4-Wh installs are "11 #er" tanks, these numbers should "work" for you... to confirm, check on your tank for the "tare(empty) weight" embossed on the neck of every propane tank... as you see below the TW of my #1 Tank is "14.2#s"... hope this helps you and others--a simple way to measure by weight the amount of propane remaining in your partial used tank...

#1 Tank
[SIZE=14pt]100%... 25.2 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 11.4 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 75%... 22.4 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 10.1 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 50%... 19.7 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 8.9 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 40%... 18.2 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 8.4 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 30%... 17.5 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 7.9 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 25%... 16.9 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 7.6 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt] 0%... 14.2 #s [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]… 6.4 kg[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt](Full: TW#1/14.2+ 11#s)[/SIZE]
 
scappoosebrad said:
Great post...always interested to hear about "shakedown cruises"... we also have a new Fleet but have only had shorter "shakedown trips" -- 2 to 3 days in milder climates in Oregon this summer/fall ...

A few questions and suggestions:
1) Solar power/propane/outdoor temp monitoring--have started a log monitoring several systems: propane use, solar use--highs/lows (estimated), fridge/heater settings, hi/low outdoor temps..etc.--these are the main uses/numbers I chart all in a 4x6 spiral notebook...an excellent way to see the trends/monitor use and recovery settings and a great way to "get to know" our camper per the uses and conditions...charting in the notebook has become a daily habit for each day's outing...

2) Leaving your heater on while traveling in cold climate? did this help or could you get by w/out running the heater in 20s to 30s outdoor running temps? especially with a hot water heater (we do NOT have a hot water heater, so might be recommended for us when traveling in colder temps) how did you "keep your cabinet doors open"? while running to "heat" your pipes? Have other 4 wheel owners done this while traveling to safeguard freezing pipes?

Love to hear your thoughts and other member's comments .... thanks

Brad in Scappoose, OR
Brad, I do keep a journal that I began when I picked up the camper, but it is more a record of where I camped, good sites, and anything out of the ordinary, such as having to switch propane tanks at 2 a.m. or having an elk in my camp in the morning as I did in the Hoh Rainforest on the Olympic Peninsula. It isn't nearly as detailed as your log.

My original plan was to drain the water system after camping on the coast and before I crossed the Rockies on my way home. The cold snuck up on me, however, and I had a night of 27deg. while in Northern Nevada. I had similar temps in Utah, but only at night when the furnace was turned up. The camper water system handled nightly lows very well. By the time I hit Wyoming a cold front moved in and it stayed about 32 deg. during the day. At that point I opened the cabinet door that accesses the water pump, and opened the lid of the storage area under the front dinette on the driver's side where the water line goes from the tank to the pump. I also left the hot water tank on, which I think probably helped quite a bit. It seemed to work OK during the day but that night it dropped to 14 deg. Everything seemed to work okay until about mid morning the next day and then the water slowed, so I had probably frozen a section of the pipe somewhere. Probably lucky I didn't do damage. I read in another post that where the water pipe exits the tank is a vulnerable spot for freezing. After I dropped down to warmer Northern Colorado I drained the system so I wouldn't have to worry about it for the rest of the trip home. Most of my trips will be during the summer and early fall, but it's nice to know that you can be OK camping later in the season with nightly lows.
 
As a data oriented person (but also an inherently lazy person) I would reccomend the following:
https://www.amazon.com/Products-024-1001-Propane-Level-Indicator/dp/B01C5RQJHS/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1509833203&sr=8-5&keywords=tank+check

and

https://www.amazon.com/Victron-SmartSolar-Charge-Controller-Bluetooth/dp/B075NQQRPD/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1509833337&sr=8-1&keywords=victron+smart+solar

If you wire your loads through the load port on the victron you get a 30 day history of both solar production and total energy usage - you can even export it to a CSV right on your phone. The tank check does exactly what your luggage scale does - but you don't have to pull the tanks out (or even get out of bed).

I have never had an issue with my water system freezing, with nights down to ~10F (with the heat on) or during the day driving around 25F. I don't leave the furnace on while driving, but I do heat the hot water tank up in the morning - it is great heat reservoir and keeps the cabinet with the plumbing it well above freezing for hours.
 
Prof,
thanks for your reply... curious on your water system slow down at mid-morning... but with temps in the hi teens, can understand especially if you closed up the storage doors to the water pump area...

I know there are some "winter 4-W campers" out there... wonder how they deal with their water systems and find any problems with line freeze ups... having spent 20 years in bush AK, our usual solution was to trickle the faucets, but with only 20 gal system, that would deplete your tank fairly quickly...probably the alternate cold weather solution to using the water system is to empty it and use a portable water can for water ... like yourself, we do not see ourselves in winter temps with our camper...so probably a "non-issue"... but good to know the limits of the system...thanks...
 
Sounds like a great trip. Thanks for the report.

I like the picture of the two silver Fleets on silver Tacomas. They look just like mine.

- Bernard
 
bfh4n said:
Sounds like a great trip. Thanks for the report.

I like the picture of the two silver Fleets on silver Tacomas. They look just like mine.

- Bernard

Too bad I didn't get to meet the driver. I probably saw a dozen or more FWC campers during my trip. They are pretty easy to spot with that stripe running around the middle. Also saw some towering, lumbering non-pop-top campers being blown around on the highway and that reinforced my decision to go low profile.
 
One thing I forgot to comment on was the experience of driving with the camper on the truck. My fear was that while it would be acceptable to have the camper on the truck during the camping months, it would sap the power to the point that it wouldn't be very fun to drive.

I'd have to say that I don't really notice it driving around town, or on relatively flat terrain on the highway. It was only on steep grades that I noticed any difference. I drove through some areas where the speed limit was 75 and 80 mph, and was able to set the cruise to the speed limit and not even think about it. I can see now why so many FWC owners leave their campers permanently attached. I haven't decided yet if I will leave my Fleet on over the winter. I may take it off just because I can, as that is one of the benefits to having this type of setup.
 

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