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The interior is cramped enough that I'm nervous about running our Coleman catalytic heater at night; a dangling blanket could easily turn into a total disaster. And even if I weren't worried about that, I'm worried about running it while we sleep, lest we don't wake up (I know the literature says it's safe given 6sq. in. of access to outside air, but still).
So keeping warm for us mostly consists in wearing all your clothes to bed, including a stocking cap and two pairs of socks, and having another person under the covers. And shutting the heater off right before sleepytime. And not opening the door if you can at all help it.
We've spent some pretty cold nights in Ludwig and lived to tell the tale.
And keep the top shut tight...
whc03grady said:The interior is cramped enough that I'm nervous about running our Coleman catalytic heater at night; a dangling blanket could easily turn into a total disaster. And even if I weren't worried about that, I'm worried about running it while we sleep, lest we don't wake up (I know the literature says it's safe given 6sq. in. of access to outside air, but still).
So keeping warm for us mostly consists in wearing all your clothes to bed, including a stocking cap and two pairs of socks, and having another person under the covers. And shutting the heater off right before sleepytime. And not opening the door if you can at all help it.
We've spent some pretty cold nights in Ludwig and lived to tell the tale.
..or just go for one of these and be done with it.
http://www.westyventures.com/propex.html
The H2000's are about the same and then there is Ca tax and shipping. The 2800 is the one I'd get.. But I'm a Bus pilot with virtually no heat. So ~10K would be nice. You water pumpers live in modern times. The guy who does Westy Ventures offers specials every "Blue Moon " or so. IIRC, this month was no shipping. But that might be for the 2800 only. It's all a wash, I suppose. If I was gonna spend Big Bucks a couple more good or bad wouldn't be a deal breaker, for me.
When I was in boy scouts we did a winter camp trip. I was cold and went to the Scout master. He said to remove the clothes that i was wearing and had worn for the day and to put on fresh socks and a tee shirt. If I still felt cold, remove the fresh tee shirt and socks. Seemed like a bass-ackwards approach at the time. It appears that the body gets used to the daily clothing and although it seems dry the clothes have body moisture and ambient moisture. To remove the clothing and put on fresh jammies to then crawl into the proper bedding allows the body to warm itself correctly.
I used this same scenario this past weekend. The night temps dropped to 30. A fresh Tee and socks, a 30* sleeping bag with a second of the same type as an extra blanket had me all toasty and warm. In the morning about 15 minutes after waking while I was folding back the bedding for the days events, I noticed it was still warm I also use the 10k btu Mr Buddy heater. 15 minutes with the top down is about all that's needed. When sleeping on the bottom bunk I put my head toward the front, feet toward the rear. The heater is just at arms reach away. Turn it on and crank it up. Crawl back under the bedding for a few minutes and it's all good. Just some thoughts. Your results may vary, YRMV
Mmmm...toasty. I have the 10k version. Definitely puts out some heat. First thing you'll notice with the open flame heater is the windows will fog up. This might happen with any type of heater though. But it will promote condensation and is why these types recommend a cracked window. Well that and the fact of the CO or CO2 ( can never remember which is worse ) levels increase.
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