MySwag.org The Off-road Camper Trailer Forum
General => General Discussion => Topic started by: wakychapmans on January 11, 2016, 02:48:27 PM
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Hey all:
We drove the 105 series Cruiser back from Melb last weekend towing the "half an 80 series camper".
We took the inland run to be different and to test out the trailer and freecamp on Saturday night at Narrandera since we had puppy with us. (more on the 105 cruiser in a different thread)
to put it bluntly... it was f'n HOT inside the trailer at night.
The trailer is an old 80 series chopped at the "B" pillar and then at an angle through half of the front door lower panels. The front end was then shaped and sheeted in steel plate. Over the XMAS break the father in law and I insulated (with foam insulation sheets from the big green shed) and lined the entire inside front section with ply; plus we built a new bed deck and covered both it and the drawers with carpet.
So basically the inside is nothing but a queen sized bed with an extra 30cm wide strip of carpet at the tailgate end for puppy to sleep on
But on Saturday night... with only the sliding side windows open, it was an oven inside. Must have been 30 degrees easy at 9.30pm. (probably didn't help that we had puppy in there with us...) It was slightly cooler when we opened the side doors. (we sleep head to the front) But still bloody uncomfortable. and open doors invite mozzies...
The side doors have power windows and no power to them. So rectifying that and adding fly screens could help a little. But I'm looking for something more than just "open the doors/windows".
If I want SWMBO to appreciate my love of camping... I need to find a viable solution.
What are my option for cooling the inside? (there is no 12V power in the trailer at the moment, but it's on the list to be done)
Roof exhaust fan?
Whirlygig to vent hot air throughout the day when travelling?
Portable 12V evaporative cooler?
Fans? (roof? walls? windows?)
cheap used van' air con unit?
open to any and all suggestions...
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We had a camp in 42C heat sat all the day with :cheers:in hand & a water spray with fan Spray & fan instant cool down , for a bit . Slipped in the slab by bed time . Cheap cooling & work well :cup:
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If you're camping with 240vt?? you can get dirt cheap air cons from online stores such as kogan.com.au for circa $300....
Air con is the only effective way out of your heat hell.....
Sent from my SM-N910G using Tapatalk
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I assume it was a warm night. But half your problem is all that metal, glass and plastic - storing and radiating heat. I've only ever been able to sleep in cars in winter for this reason.
I'd be looking at getting the windows activated, with screens, and also maybe rig the tailgate with canvas and screens so you can have it open too. Then add a couple of 12v fans.
Aircon for sure if you use powered sites, it's not much of a weight penalty for a trailer that heavy.
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This may help.
I recently cut to the shape to fit the inside of all my rear windows of my 80 series windows with silver sun shade that is used for windscreens.
To my amazement, it has made a huge difference in temperature. You can buy this off the roll at clark rubber. It's slightly different, silver lined 4mm black foam but it works.
The other thing is you need some sort of hot air scape on your roof. I'm thinking of something like our Jayco roof vent.
Having said that, there are some nights in the Jayco when there is no breeze, this is when we need some sort of 12v cooler.
Ive had a thought about a 12v fan with a wet cheese cloth hanging in front of the fan...............yep, you have to soak the cloth often.
:cheers:
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I'll second the roof vent idea. Every hardtop caravan/ hybrid thingy you see has at least one roof vent. Hot air rises, so you want to give it somewhere to go.
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We have a outdoor connection 12v fan for use in the queensize swag. On particularly hot and sticky nights we use a damp sarong instead of a sheet, works very good.
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Maybe a cooler that doubles as a DIY air conditioner is what is needed ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITtlxjvLQis (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITtlxjvLQis)
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Here you go DIY Evaporative cooler https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHbQYajfGqM (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHbQYajfGqM)
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Sounds as though the insulation is doing the reverse of what you want at night, by keeping the heat in. To cool it quicker at night consider ways of keeping it cool while on the road and during the day.