> As I mentioned in a previous thread, I found my Suburban's duct work system to be very restrictive. There are no blockages or sharp turns in the
> ducts, just turbulent airflow I guess.
>
> In an effort to please my wife one cold morning, I opened the front panel of the Suburban and left the access door open. The amount of hot air
> the furnace can now deliver is almost overwhelming! It quickly heats the coach and shuts down. I's say before it would run for 50% of the time or
> more. Now I would say it runs for maybe 1/4 of that... maybe 10% of the time. So therefore less duty cycle, less power drain.
>
> Just what I did.
***** *****
Interesting but that problem is not unique to just one coach. Just about every coach that has the furnace system for heat has the same problem. It's
a bad design that has never been corrected.
I have never taken any load readings from the fan running, just know that with a new battery, by morning if on battery power, the battery would be
down by morning.
My coach has 3 duct outlets, 2 of them open almost right from the furnace as the furnace panel is against the cabinet wall. 1 duct opening goes
through ductwork toward the bedroom.
So the two duct openings have no flexy duct at all, just an opening to the living area.
The run to the rear bedroom is all flexy duct so must be a huge amount of "tension" or resistance to the airflow to move air to the rear of the coach.
In my coaches case, it is difficult to know if the duct is clear and open or if it has kinks in it because the friggin PO had replaced all that duct
run when he made changes to the interior of the coach. I'll certainly look into the chance that a panel may be able to be removed to lessen the air
tension (load) on the fan. Be nice if it could drop the run time and or drop the power load the fan requires.
The whole reason for this thread is because of the high amps that the fan draws and the battery not lasting overnight. The match is not good.
The OEM coach had a single 12v battery. Later owners updated to the 2 6v batteries as they were using the coach to overnight. The trend now is to
change your lighting to LED which cuts power usage. The last power hog is the coach furnace. The popular fix is to use the Buddy heater, or a heater
that uses propane and does not require power. Most of these are ventless which brings up the exhaust concern and carbon monoxide.
But, as I have noted in some postings, the BUDDY heater and similar heaters, are built with aluminum tubing and connections, making them somewhat
fragile. After My heater went ablaze while running, and it was just sitting there and had been running for awhile, I got concerned. I could have
lost my coach to that incident. There were at least two UTube vids that illustrated the same problem and similar conditions. And I did post a
warning about the event. Many campers use those heaters, to save power on the battery, when heating the coach without land power.
It seems the coach furnace is the last obstacle to power hungry systems.
There is a lot to think about with this information about moding the furnace cabinet.
It would be nice to know what the furnace fan load was before you open the furnace door, relieving the fan of the power load to push air through the
duct system, and then compare the load after you open that furnace door. If that loading on the fan drops, that can make a big difference.
The time length of the fan running is a big determining factor also, as you illustrate.
If it resulted in less power drain to run the fan and a cut in the length of time the fan runs ( load on battery ), then that could be a big factor in
the problem.
But, some of the installs will not allow the furnace to be opened to let the duct air pressure to be relieved. Mine is in a tight spot under the
kitchen sink so I'd have to look at it and see if the panel could even be opened.
Another attempt could be to add more duct openings?????
But the fan power load readings would need to be taken to get an idea if it would even help to make a modification.
Also to consider is the old style of furnace, which is a high, boxy looking design, square pretty much, and the newish compact design, which is a
lower design made to fit in smaller spaces. The same act, to open the furnace panel to relieve the air pressure, for one design may not work for the
other..
Thanks for the information, it is something to play with.
I found the cheap furnace in a Utube vid and posted it here to be scrutinzed. The PRICE of this has dropped. The first vid said it was $350, the
next vid said it was $250 and now there is one, (it may be on sale or a sell out) on Amazon for $150. It is half the size of a compact furnace for
the coach and comes with everything to install including the controller.
The only thing left would be to test one and find space to install one, at least in a GMC. The friggin PO removed what little storage space my coach
had and I have been trying to get some of it back ever since purchase.
This little furnace is available in two fuels, one is diesel fuel which is what most of the Utube vids show running and they run well. There is also
a GASOLINE version, I only saw one vid for this unit and he said it ran better on diesel than gasoline. Could be an install problem, but it is an
option. If they come up with a propane version, we'd be good.
If I remember right, the start up was about 10-12 amps and after it was running and making heat, that power use dropped to under 1 amp, I want to say
.5 amp but check the vids and Amazon site.
It was luck that this heater was found, good or bad, that is to be determined. Happy to pass the info along.
s
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