patrkbukly said:Hi Billiski,
So you do not fill the camper with water in it's own tank/plumbing but rather just use the 5 gallon water container?
20 gallons of water in the main tank, or even a little less, probably will not freeze "solid" but it is not insulated and external to heated interior of Hawk...and the line to the drain at the rear of the camper from the bottom of the main tank would then have water in it; it could freeze and bust a fitting or pipe.. I do not believe you can isolate the water in the main tank...
Unlike the hot water heater which holds one gallon of water even when it is drained into the main tank [and then out the external drain at the rear of the camper]... my assumption is that the one gallon residual left in the hot water heater can freeze and expand but do no damage inside that "6 gallon" tank space.
Under marginal conditions, like getting caught in an unexpected cold snap and with water in the system, we have heated the 6 gallons of water [this takes 15+ mins starting with cold water] then we drain that hot water into the main tank, dumping water out the rear drain as needed to create 5 gallons of space in the main tank...we then have hot water in some of the lines and the main tank...repeat as needed...takes propane but heats plumbing.
My approach on my ski trip will be to remove all water that I can from the Hawk water system and switch over to my 7 gallon water "jug" for any water needs. The jug will stay up front in the cab under the heater vent when moving and in the Hawk when parked.
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Ps...Any "trick" light weight and collapsible ladders you folks use for getting snow off roof...I have other ideas for accessing the roof but a ladder would be nice...one I could carry in the Hawk and take out at night.