I'm building a winter Syncro currently. I pulled all the AC stuff and repalaced with another heater core to supply tons of heat to warm us up after fun in the snow. dylan Tom Buese <tombuese@COMCAST.NET> wrote: On Jul 29, 2007, at 2:20 PM, Christopher Gronski wrote: > I have a Eberspacher B1L (NOS still in shrink wrap) that I plan to > sell on eBay in order to buy one of Karl's propex furnaces, It's 1800W > (6143.4 BTU). I was all set to install the B1L and then stopped > because I know one day I want to go diesel and I don't want to have to > change the heater again (or carry two fuels). > > I think Karl's HS2000 at 6500 BTU would be plenty warm enough, > although the HS2800 at 9500 BTU might allow you to keep your pop top > up a little later in the season. If money is an issue go for the > HS2000, but fme I like overkill so when I get mine I'll pay the extra > $200 for the HS2800. Overkill is better than underkill when it comes to heat.
Tom B.-want to stay warm at 0 degrees F. > > Chris > > On 7/29/07, Tom Buese wrote: >> Since its really hot outside, I am starting to think about winter & >> installing 1 of Karl's propex furnaces. I see on his website, that >> there are 2 models. What's the opinion of this august group, >> especially you Canuckians, on the proper size furnace? Will the $700 >> model (6.5k btu)keep us nice & toasty, possible in the NE in mid >> winter, or do I need the $900 (9k btu)model? >> >> Tom B.-Wave 3000 didn't cut it at my coldest (28 degrees +-) campout >> this year, January in Lake Havasu City, AZ. >> |
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