Quick update on the build. Have had a few delays, but hopefully camper will be complete in a couple weeks.
Pictures can be seen on our website;
https://www.terralitecampers.com/
Our current build is the one with camo;
Interior pics will be coming soon...........
I was hoping to get away from a fuel base heat, but it may be a good back up. While I've been happy with the propex, the propane tank is heavy and takes space. Scout does something similar to what you are describing with diesel heater. Wish I could find one of these:
CPT has a one-year warranty.
In general, they warranty the materials, and workmanship of the products that they produce.
They cannot offer a mechanical warranty as they cannot control how the unit is being used.
I think the box was originally 6.5', and the flat bed extends to edge of hitch for 7 ft.
Door placement and cabover length are definitely considerations. Thats one thing I appreciate working with CPT. Their engineers helped guide me with what I wanted to do. There is internal framing...
I have the Propex heater in my current camper and it works great. With this next build having over 900 ah of lithium, I was looking for alternatives to fuel type heaters that produce dry heat like the diesel, gas, and propane. Not interested in radiant for various reasons. If I do end up with...
Thank you for that! It was getting a bit tiresome of the back and forth of opinions of those I know nothing about. While I too enjoy some discussion, it gets to a certain point where you start to wonder if they are doing more harm than good. Meaning opinions are taken out of context for the...
Perhaps we can get off the panel topic. I was hoping for some component input on this next build.
Would like for it to be all electric. 920 ah lithium will be the power and redarc the management. Anybody have thoughts on dry heat such as diesel or propex heater would put out only electric...
I was referring to the CPT chart. https://www.cptpanels.com/composite-panels/materials/
Regarding lightest weight eps gets 5 pvc 3, both have equal insulation value, yes pvc is stronger and more durable. Pvc costs more. I'm satisfied with the EPS.
Ruff, Alloy hit the nail on the head regarding overall strength. When building my own panels, I thought XPS was the best option due to the reasons you stated. Stiffness may not be ideal in a habitat on wheels. EPS actually has more bonding surface than XPS. CPT uses a two-part polyurethane...
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