The are OK for a tent but a poor design for a camper.
The back pressure from blowing air into a sealed camper makes it horribly inefficient.
It needs to draw (not the combustion) air from inside the camper.
I have an all-in-one diesel heater that I replaced my DIY unit with and just bungee flexible dryer duct to the inlet. That then gets plumbed in to the camper through the propane hose outlet (if I were cooking outside) so it's pulling cold air off the floor behind the cabinets. Not the most perfect seal to the inlet of the heater, but that's easy to remedy with a 3" takeoff like I did with my diy one. Staying toasty at 9,000ft asl right now in a pop up camper, same last night with 10*F temps and 35mph gusts. I have my roof vent (no fan) cracked so the abundance of dog farts being produced can go out.
IMO they're perfect for a camper. When I upgrade from a pop up I'll be installing one inside and fitting a quick connect for fuel so I can drop a line in a jerry can outside.. keep all the stink and spill potential out of the camper.
My fuel pump settings are 1.3-3.1hz and fan is 2000rpm min to 3900rpm max. I have maybe 20 seconds of minimal visible smoke on startup at 5,200ft asl (home) and 9,000ft asl.. this seems to keep the case temp warm enough to allegedly curb a lot of sooting. I'm set to 2.5hz right now and case is at 392*F, low 20's outside. I'm consuming 0.97a/13w from a 70ah lifepo4 battery, 96-107w on startup for a whopping 90 seconds.
I got 12 hrs of run time off a little less than 5L last night, bet it would have been longer with a hard sided camper but the wind was penetrating the walls of my pop up. 3kw model. My camper has a suburban propane heater (camper is a 2017) and it's just terrible. Bakes someone's legs if they're on the wrong side of the dinette, bakes you when you sleep and then cuts off for too long. I helped that a little with a fan to stir up air by the thermostat but it's still not a thing I enjoy using. And it uses nearly 50w running, so I'll take 13w all day over that.