Better than a tent.
Hello All,...Wondering how the FWC/ATC's do for winter use. Some of my concerns are:
- Insulating value of the pop up material: The Palomino sucked it was just fabric and the litecrafts were 2 layers of a weblon material with a closed cell foam sandwiched inbetween. The litecrafts did pretty well.
- Pop Up Lift Mechanism: How is lifting the pop up of a FWC or ATC with Snow/Ice on the roof? The lift mechanisms of these campers are very different from the other ones I have had
- Condensation: I know it is hard to eliminate but I could make it rain in the Lite-Craft and in the Northstar it would stay dry with 2 adults and 2 dogs.
- Looks: I know how cheesy to worry about looks
but how does one of these campers look on a Dodge QuadCab. The cabover's of these campers seem a little on the short side. That was the case with my Palomino and I thought it looked awkward....Some options I will be including are
- Ho(t) Water
- Outside Shower
- Eliminate Fridge and replace with 12V cooler
- Wave 3 Catalytic Heater (keeps temps more consistent)
Sledskiing,
With your experience it sounds like you may have a better idea of how they'll do than we do but I'll give this a shot anyway. Taking your questions in order:
- Fabric provides pretty much no insulation at all.
- You lift what's on the roof in the rear, more in the front. the rear is a direct lift of the weight between the back of the camper and half way between the pivot point in the front and the lift point, military press with your knees bent.... The front is worse because a distributed snow load is from half way between the rear hinge point and lift point to the front of the camper. Just depends on how much and how dense/wet the snow is. Solution, scrape it off or melt it off (turn the furnace up high) first.
- We don't have the arctic pack and when it's raining and mid to lower 30's there's a LOT of condensation. We wipe it off but under those conditions it never dries. Arizona in winter at mid 20's is a piece of cake...dries every morning and not much condensation to start with. We would like to add a full inch of ensolite around the fabric with a fabric/vapor barrier inside that to reduce furnace use, noise and condensation...store the ensolite under the bed mattress to add more cushion. In our experience a good mountaineering tent (i.e. North Face VE-25) gets a lot less condensation and our cabin gets none compared to the no arctic-pack FWC with furnace on low at night.
- We have the 48" cab-over on our Grandby on a regular cab Dodge 2500. Looks good to me...no clue if you'd like it on yours. Stan @ FWC has pics of different rigs with FWC's. Bet he'd show you some if he thought you might buy a camper from him
- Susan says the hot water heater is a must. I think it's a pain in cold weather unless you drain it and don't use it. I'm always nervous it will freeze and break the tank when we travel long and can't run the furnace at low (20 deg or less) temps. We'll try a 12V heater (150-300 W) next year when we're traveling in cold temps and see if I'm more comfortable with that.
- The outside shower is great if it's warm out...sub zero it's a b****! We use a little less than a gallon per shower and have a "Paha-Que" outhouse tent that we use with it (most of the time).
- We've really enjoyed the 3CF 3-way fridg. Others really like the 12V Engle or Nova Kool (?...Help me out here Scott). We'd like to see FWC/ATC offer an option with no propane...DC fridg/solar, diesel stove-heater combination (Toyo or Wallas) Winter offers it's own refrigeration so no worries about solar then.
- Don't know the wave 3. We've heard of folks having serious problems using cat. heaters without venting on their boat...sure would be nice to have something not as noisy to heat with as the standard issue though.
We've had the camper since December '08 and spent 2 months + in it in the southwest and then ran through B.C. to Juneau, AK, in late March. We've got 40 years in tents before that, sometimes in serious cold.
Our 2 cents!
Happy Trails!
'birds
P.S. Big excitement at the 'birds house tonight...Humpback feeding in the cove about 300 yards from the house...right at sunset on a beautiful blue sky/flat water day...we've only seen it a few times in the last 20 years. LIFE IS GOOD!