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Topic ClosedTo all you naysayers to the rdome.

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marwayne View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: To all you naysayers to the rdome.
    Posted: 22 Oct 2012 at 8:36pm
We were out camping for 4 days, middle of october, night temp around 0* Celcius, daytime temp single digits, so you want a place to warm up. No chance with an awning, but the r-dome is enclosed, so I put in my little LP heater with my Eco Fan on top, opened the trailer door and within 5 min the r-dome and the trailer are warm (about 20* C). I would not trade my dome for any kind of awning. After all we live north of the 49th.
 
If you want something done right, do it yourself.
2011 RP172, 2016 Tundra 5.7 Litre, Ltd.


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Racer|X| View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22 Oct 2012 at 8:43pm
I dig my r-dome...nice idea wi the heater.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22 Oct 2012 at 8:44pm
+1 , marwayne! We love our dome! Easy to keep warm at below freezing temps!
Chris and Walt
'10 RP-171 'Free Spirit'
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mountain mist View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 Oct 2012 at 5:45pm
love the sounds of the r-dome, have thought and thought on it, but I am older and one person putting it up and thru the groove means up on a ladder. But I really like the idea for those who can handle it, just makes an extra room rain or shine!
'11 Forest River r.pod 171
'10 Ford Edge
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change here, Trudi has gone, Austin now has a small black schnauzer buddy, Bentley
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dsmiths View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 Oct 2012 at 8:03pm
We got the dome with our 12 model 172 and have not had the chance to put it up yet, but by golly next summer its going up one way or the other.
Dane and Donna Smith
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Goose View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 Oct 2012 at 8:49pm
  We love the Dome too. I have to say that the heater and the fan look like something out of a Sci-Fi movie.
   Glade that it works well.    Goose
Mother Goose's Caboose..2011 RP171..07 Grand Cherokee
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marwayne View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 Oct 2012 at 9:41pm
The nice part about the fan is, when it sits on the heater it produces it's own electricity.
If you want something done right, do it yourself.
2011 RP172, 2016 Tundra 5.7 Litre, Ltd.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Oct 2012 at 7:20am
I'm only 5'8" tall so I have to use a stool to get the dome on.  But it is worth the effort.  Please explain about that fan.  It converts heat to electricity to power itself?  Great idea!

Terry
RP-175 W/Lift Kit 2011 Ford F-150 4X4
Saint Augustine, FL: The first permanent European settlement in the USA: 1565
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Oct 2012 at 1:51pm

The cool thing about thermoelectric pumps (Peltier junctions - same thing used in the Coleman thermoelectric coolers to heat/cool) is if you drive them backwards they will produce some electricity.  Supply electric and you get heat on one side and cold on the other, as long as you heat sink one side.  Put heat on one side and the same heat sink on the other (the big black fins on top in that picture) and you get the energy to run that fan.

Recently I saw a woodburning camp stove which does the same thing to drive a fan which blows fresh air into the burning chamber.  As an added bonus it has a plug where you can charge your cell phone in the middle of nowhere.  As long as the fire is going.
Doug ~ '10 171 (2009-2015) ~ 2008 Salem ~ Pod instruction manual
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bhamster View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Oct 2012 at 5:45pm
Originally posted by techntrek

Recently I saw a woodburning camp stove which does the same thing to drive a fan which blows fresh air into the burning chamber.  As an added bonus it has a plug where you can charge your cell phone in the middle of nowhere.  As long as the fire is going.

I use one for backpacking. It's called a "BioLite":


The charging part isn't so great (too slow), but the TEG runs the fan just fine and keeps the internal battery topped off. It's a fantastic stove and will provide an intense smokeless spiral of flames as long as you have a supply of sticks.
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