chopper5670

kentucky

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Joined: 07/22/2011

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my holding tanks are not heated or insulated . i would like to do both ..any suggestions?
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pianotuna

Regina, SK, Canada

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Joined: 12/18/2004

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Hi,
If you enclose them consider a duct from the furnace for warming them.
If not then there are "stick on" tank heaters available.
Mine were enclosed and supposedly heated--but I found I needed to add a small heater that is thermostatically controlled. I did add a 120 volt outlet in the enclosure which I power from my inverter and/or shore power.
Regards, Don
Kustom Koach Class C 28'5" 256 watts Unisolar, 875 amp hours in two battery banks 12 volt batteries, 2500 MSW watt inverter.
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chopper5670

kentucky

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pianotuna wrote: Hi,thank you
If you enclose them consider a duct from the furnace for warming them.
If not then there are "stick on" tank heaters available.
Mine were enclosed and supposedly heated--but I found I needed to add a small heater that is thermostatically controlled. I did add a 120 volt outlet in the enclosure which I power from my inverter and/or shore power.
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chopper5670

kentucky

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pianotuna wrote: Hi,
If you enclose them consider a duct from the furnace for warming them.
If not then there are "stick on" tank heaters available.
Mine were enclosed and supposedly heated--but I found I needed to add a small heater that is thermostatically controlled. I did add a 120 volt outlet in the enclosure which I power from my inverter and/or shore power. thank you for your help
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rgolding

Southern Illinois

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Joined: 05/09/2010

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Ultrheat AM-Model 0900
or
carry a gallon of RV anti-freeze and dump some in for the times it is needed.
Is this an ongoing constant need of being below freezing?
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boosTT

Milwaukee

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I would just pour a bunch of antifreeze in.
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smkettner

Southern California

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I installed Ultra Heat brand tank heaters. I went with 120v heaters as if it is that cold I plan to be plugged in. The fresh water tank I did the combination 12v/120v for additional heat and heat while in transit. Add up the 12v amps before you buy a bunch and need to add a second converter. You can find lower cost stuff on ebay but watch the wattage as you may need two pads for larger tanks. My tanks have been good down to about -5F in my fair weather trailer.
I used 120v heat tape to wrap the waste pipes and covered that with self stick foam insulation from Home Depot.
My trailer underbelly is fully exposed.
www.ultraheat.com
2001 F150 SuperCrew
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skipnchar

Topeka or somewhere else

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Joined: 12/17/2003

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Electric is the way to go if you TRAVEL in cold weather. Usually there are 120 volt AC heaters for when camping and 12 volt heaters for when towing.
Good luck / Skip
2011 F-150 HD Ecoboost 3.5 V6. 2550 payload, 17,100 GCVWR -
2004 F-150 HD (Traded after 80,000 towing miles)
2007 Rockwood 8314SS 34' travel trailer
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