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I'm not a fan of the standard RV furnace. They are too loud and too 12VDC hungry.
Recently, cheap chinese diesel heaters (knockoffs of Webasto cab heaters) have become available and are popular with the tiny home / Skoolie builders. They are currently less than $100 delivered.
I bought mine on ebay, it's a Vevor brand but they are apparently all very similar.
I'm documenting the installation here along with all mistakes and regrets
In order to use the existing vent holes from the old Solaire furnace, I built a base for the heater so that the exhaust pipe is above the vent...
- tmsnyder
- Replies: 35
- Subforum: House Systems, Fixtures, and Furniture

That is an outstanding mod! Looks great! What model furnace did you use again?Here's how I modified the exterior intake/exhaust fittings.
The LH vent is blanked off while the RH louvers are cut to allow the exhaust pipe to protrude through slightly. The small exhaust/intake vent supplied with the furnace was then fastened to the protruding exhaust pipe, standing off about 3/8".
Best I could do to retain the look of the original.
View attachment 17400
Thanks!! I think it's an Atwood but some Suburbans are pretty similar (I think!)That is an outstanding mod! Looks great! What model furnace did you use again?
Any more details or photos on this? My coach has existing coolant lines attached to a heat exchanger next to the existing original furnace and I'm considerably going much more into hydronic heating.I installed an Aqua-Hot Gen-1 unit which is a forced air/water heater combo which works on both electric and propane. It fit in the stock location almost perfectly, but was obviously not a straightforward installation, the plumbing being the tricky part (I had a plumber run the water lines), but it works well and has the added ability to provide hot water during dry camping. It does blend the water with water from the factory water heater, and I still need to add a shut off valve to the old water heater to prevent that, but I will do that as soon as I spend a little time figuring out how to do it.
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Aqua-Hot Gen 1
The Gen 1 By Aqua-Hot Is A Compact Forced Air/Water Heater System In An All-In-One Unit, Fueled By Diesel, Gasoline Or Propane Specifically Designed For RVcampaigns.airxcel.com
I thought I posted a few pictures here back when I did this install a few years ago, but that might have been to Facebook. The unis dimentionally fits in the same spot that the old SolAir unit. It has four duct outputs that I adapted to the existing duct-work, plus an added one. The install kit comes complete with pretty much everything needed to install it and it is pretty straightforward.Any more details or photos on this? My coach has existing coolant lines attached to a heat exchanger next to the existing original furnace and I'm considerably going much more into hydronic heating.