Hi all - Need someone to share their experiences. I am upgrading from a popup (Fleetwood Niagara) to a new 312BH. I am use to going through quite a bit of propane in cold weather camping.
Just out of curiousity - How quickly do you go through 60 lbs of propane when camping in the cold? (Yes I know there are varying degrees of cold - so please let me know the specifics)
When dry camping the hardest thing to keep up with is battery power to run the furnace fan. In cold weather I travel everday just to make sure that I do not freeze. It gets cold here in Floriduh ! 28 degrees tonite !
X2! I went from a Flagstaff Popup to a 30' 5th wheel. We got too old to be cranking up the old one so love being able to pull in and 10 min later have everything setup, mostly with a push of a few buttons. Every so often we look back at being only a piece of fabric away from the outside world, but we sure love the creature comforts and room in the 5er. It's not quite as fun riding out a thunderstorm in the 5th wheeler as it was in watching the canvas walls of the popup first blow outward like a ballon and then suck in as the top of it swayed back and forth, miss those days. Now all we do is rock! At least with the 5er when you heat it up, it stays warm between runs of the furnace. Have fun and this is a great place to get information. Always had several answers to my questions on this board, mostly helpful
With the popup, we went through a 20 lb bottle in about one day and one night in really cold temps - around 20 degrees. We also faced some super high winds. The first year I had it (November 2005) we were in winds 45 maybe more. VERY SCARY. Didnt sleep a wink all night. Needless to say when it is windy - even with the heater on and ceramic heaters running - THERE IS A BIT OF A DRAFT!!!. So I am anxious to get the new camper which should be a couple of more weeks before it arrives. We use our camper the most during deer season - about a week. Usually temps are 40s during the day and 30s at night. Sometimes gets into the 20s. The hard sides will be nice to have. I have definitely been down the road of conserving water. We only had 20 gallons onboard in the popup. We have electricity but dont have water where we camp. The larger tanks will be great to have.
We noticed right away after we went from the Coleman Niagara popup to the Outback that our propane usage dropped considerably. We had a couple of nights like you describe with high winds and temps in the upper 30's and we went through a 20lb tank of propane in 2 days. Fortunately the wind stopped for the last, 3rd, night so we didn't have to fill up our propane tanks. Even though our Outback isn't a "4 season" trailer the furnace runs only occasionally at night. Battery power hasn't been an issue for me but I've got golf cart batteries and a 80watt solar charging panel.
We camped for 5 days during a blizzard in Tulsa over Christmas. We were in a campground with full hookups and had the heat going constantly. We used less that a half of a 30 lb tank.
Just took ours on her first winter campout in 20's and 30's.
On the nights where we dry camped we used 2 gallons a night. On the nights we had hook ups we ran our little electric heater and the trailers heat still kicked on a few times at night. We used about half as much on those nights.
I came to these numbers because I had full tanks and had them re-filled right before we pulled into our fill hookup site. Then had them toped off when we left.
Without any more info that question can't be answered. It's like asking how much gas will a car use. Are you driving in the city or on the freeway. Empty or towing a trailer. In -30 degree or 100 degree temperature.
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