Winter found us!

We’ve been hanging around southeast Texas for months now – all with the intent of avoiding the cold winter back home in Central Illinois.  So much for that.  We are hanging out in a Thousand Trails north of Houston.  We did see it coming, sneaking up on us like a herd of elephants, unlike, it seems, many other people: WINTER!

Temperatures down here have been lows between 30 and 40 degrees and highs 50-60.  Not great weather, but not terrible either.  I even dressed in shorts some unusual days when temps were in the 70’s.  Weather forecasts say we have lots of 70s days coming, but after a week more of this slush, ice and cold.

We started seeing references to Artic blasts, Polar vortexes and such, a week out.  Having spent time in very cold weather and realizing just how ill-equipped most south Texans would be dealing with Real Winter Weather, we started prepping.  Food and supplies were gathered.  We knew from the get-go we didn’t want to be out on the roads when the white stuff hit the highways.  Driving with these people on dry roads on sunny days was bad enough.  The 100+ car pileups just confirmed how inexperienced drivers down here are.  As the impending storms drew close, the forecasts continued to get even worse.  A last-minute safari was deemed necessary as we realized our RVs were not going to survive on their own.  The wives managed to snag another small space heater and a string of construction lights along with some additional extension cords.

When we went to Wisconsin in the dead of winter, we took 4 space heaters, pink foam board to put around our bedroom slide and a full RV, homemade skirt.  We also left the main slide in to minimize exposed surface area and all the air leaks around the slide.

Now we had two small heaters in our RV and one for our daughter’s.  We both have electric fireplaces.  During the safari, no regular trouble lights could be found.  These are a common way to keep water bays from freezing.  A hundred watts here and there to keep temps above freezing.  For our RV – we started with one light in our water bay.  I also have battery warmers installed around our Lithium block.  I have remote temperature sensors in a couple places, including the water bay and I quickly realized the one light wouldn’t be enough to keep the bay from freezing and had to move one of the small space heaters in there.  It had a thermostat, so with a little trial and error, I could find the setting to keep the temps in there between 50 and 60 degrees.  All well and good.  But life is never that simple.

Our daughter’s RV had three water bays and a block of Lithiums in a separate battery bay.  I took the string of 5 construction lights and cut them apart and merged them with a set of extension cords – creating 5 separate 100-watt trouble lights.  Two went into her main water bay, one each in the other two (which just were tank dump locations) and the fourth went into the battery bay along with all my remaining Reflectix insulation to create a heated space around the batteries.

Our propane tank was nearly full, but our daughter’s wasn’t.  Early in the process we packed up their RV quickly and managed to get the propane tank filled at the campground.

All ready for a bit of cold, right?

All our planning up to this point, ASSUMED that our 50-amp campground pedestals would continue working.  Why wouldn’t they?  We were not far from a major city (Houston), and near an interstate and a medium sized city.  There were lots of power lines around, major power lines.  Power in the campground was all underground, safe from trees.  There’s lots of money in Texas for proper uilities, right?

The first morning of the cold wave, we woke shortly after 4 am – which was about the time my Victron power system says power went out.  Now for many things in our RV, we can function without campground power.  We have 400 amp-hours of lithium and a 3000-watt inverter and lots of solar.  But, battery heaters, space heaters and the propane furnace use a lot of electricity.  And in our daughter’s RV, there were all those 100-watt bulbs and a space heater and an electric fireplace – suddenly mother nature changed all the rules in a game we thought we had won.

It all became about resource management.  We both have built in generators.  But built-in generators use gasoline out of the RV’s main tank.  But the pickups are set at about ¼ tank level so the generator can’t run the tank dry.  So, we are told, and hope is true because one RV didn’t have a full tank of gas (one did).  Generators use around 1/3 to 2/3rds of a gallon per hour, so running the generator for 8 hours a day or more starts to add up.  When we can use the space heaters and fireplace, we don’t use nearly as much Propane as when we have to rely on the propane for ALL our heat.  We needed to fill our water tanks and put hour hoses away.  We needed to watch our water bay temperatures.  We needed to watch our propane tanks and we needed to watch our gas tanks as well.  Oh, and walk the dogs several times a day.

We have 800 watts of solar, but cloudy days and a thick coating of ice and snow meant little help from solar until the second day when we got just enough warmth and sun to clear off the panels.  To top it off, there are different flavors of power, available and limited by the design of our RV system.  Our generator provides two 30-amp circuits, not the two 50 amps we could get from the campground.  Those two are divided up – one goes to the front A/C, the fireplace and the electric side of the water heater.  No plugs, no other access.  The other side runs to the rear A/C and the Inverter.  When there is power from the camp pedestal or generator – that 30 or 50 amp can pass right through the inverter to the SIX breaker circuits.  Six 20 Amp circuits. That means it’s not hard to exceed 30 amps and pop the breaker on the generator or the breaker panel in the bedroom.  So, we end up watching our usage with rules like “One appliance in the kitchen on at a time with the space heater, or two on if the space heater is off.”  The fun part is the inverter is rated at 3000 watts but will do up to 5600 for short periods – but while it is just passing current, it will handle a full 30 for a long while.  But if we pop the 30-amp breaker on the generator, then the inverter tries to supply the full 30+ amps itself by drawing large amperages from the batteries.  This actually works seamlessly so long as the draw when the generator breaker pops isn’t too big.  The same goes for when campground power is up but we were afraid it might go out.  I monitored our usage to make sure we were keeping the draw through the inverter low enough it could catch the load if campground power dropped.  When we installed the solar and inverter, I also bought the Victron Color Control, which was quite expensive.  But it connects both to my RV lan and to Victron internet servers, so I can peek at what is going on with the Victron equipmewnt from my phone either in the RV or out and about.

Watching the local news in Texas was no help.  It seems Texas created their own power grid for much of the state.  Reports came in about “frozen windmills”, which isn’t really true.  Windmills have less wind on average in the winter so their output is down and some political hacks tried to use those numbers to blame the outtages on green power.  Most explanations about power failures contained confusing and vague descriptions of power plant failures and LONG times it would take to bring the generating units back up to full capacity.  So far, the only specifics are that power generating plants weren’t sufficiently “winterized”, I assume meaning insulated, and critical pipes and components froze.  They talked about needing to do rolling blackouts, but the reality is that large portions of the Texas power grid were simply down. Down for days.

Now most campgrounds with power at each site don’t allow generators, but in cases when campground power is out, they do allow generators.  Still, we tried not to use them during quiet hours.  Fortunately, with our Lithium batteries, we could get through a night keeping the bays warm as well as us inside – as long as it wasn’t too cold.  The first night it was only down in the 20’s.  By then, there was nearly half an inch of ice on everything along with 4 inches of snow on top of that.  Despite all the weather warnings, many people in the campground failed to make appropriate preparations.  The campground Facebook group has people looking for gas for their generators, asking for help with all sorts of problems from frozen water to dead batteries.

We saw a number of water connections still hooked up, and after the second very cold night, with burst water filters.  It seemed everyone was trying to get their propane tanks filled.  Which was fine when there was campground power – but filling propane tanks involves a heavy-duty pump – that needs electricity!  When power did come back on, it didn’t take long to empty the campgrounds propane supply.

Power was out from 4 am, until 10 PM the next day.  Fortunately, we had power for the coldest night.  My calculations showed we could make it through that night on battery but I wasn’t happy about how low the batteries would get (about 20%) which didn’t leave a lot of room for calculation error.   It went down again at 9 am the next day for several hours, then came back that afternoon.  While we could have barely survived on our batteries that second night with 9-degree weather, but I have no idea how many in the campground could – at least without running their generators ALL NIGHT, which for many would involve a cold, dark of night, gas tank refill…… if they had gas.

Late the second day, I was out front of our RV on the street and a person driving by asked if power was back on yet.  I told him, nope.  He relayed a story about trying to find gasoline.  One store(Kroger) was open, but their gas station was out of gas.  The nearby Loves station was open and had gas, but the line to get to a pump was AN HOUR LONG!

This morning I went out to fill the freshwater tank because there are neighborhoods in the area with boil orders due to low water pressure from all the broken pipes.  Not frozen underground pipes, but frozen pipes under and inside houses or in the water plants themselves.  I nearly had to wade to the side of the rig because there is an 8-inch drain from the hill behind us that empties right between our site and our daughters.  The flow was spreading out and covering the concrete pad under our RV.  I have plastic “steppingstones” for helping me stay out of the mud – I arranged them to help redirect the edge of the flow that was heading our way.  Then I moved some mud around to more of the offending water headed toward the ditch instead of us.  Water will be draining out of that hill for days, including after the temps drop low enough to freeze most everything flowing out.

Takeaways:

Texas power officials, including local power plants FAILED miserably to prepare for these winter storms.  They know exactly how much power will be used whenever the temperatures drop to any level.  These calculations are used by every electricity company, pretty much everywhere.  There is zero excuse for power generating plants failing like dominos because it got cold.  They already had this situation back in 2011, along with all sorts of investigations and commissions.  They knew exactly what they needed to do to avoid this.  There is zero excuse for the people responsible for Texas power to fail to plan, prepare and successfully handle the power demand.  Explanations in the media attempt to blame windmills – and while wind product was down (always is in the winter), it was a small part of the reduced power supply.  There does seem to have been a shortage of natural gas used by many of the power plants, but even that could have been managed better.  Rolling blackouts could have started earlier thus avoiding total shutdown of some plants that seemed to take over a day to get running again.  The reality is, Texas created their own power grid, without any Interstate connections precisely so they could avoid federal regulations about quality, backup etc.  They created this situation, on purpose from the ground up.  Own it.

I don’t want to sound like RVers need any special treatment.  They should be MORE prepared because they are more exposed.  They “should” be more prepared because they have to be more dependent on themselves on the road.  Unfortunately, many aren’t. When it gets cold, all six sides of the house (RV) are exposed. They have slides and all sorts of air leaks.  They don’t have the thick insulation or heat conserving mass that houses at least can have.  I can personally say that having to be more self-reliant raises the stress a bit.  I try to anticipate worst case so I can be ready – and while it has helped me be prepared, most of the time worst case never comes.

Another shortage – communication.  Both from the state power grid and the campground.  Estimates that were published as to when power might be restored were always late, vague and inaccurate.  Communication from the campground was also missing.  Perhaps they never had a way to notify everyone as to current issues.  ALL campers should have been notified to empty their dirty tanks, fill their clean water tank, put their hoses away, to not dump during hours when power was out and seek gas and propane supplies in advance of the storm.  All campers should have figured these things out for themselves, but many needed to be told but weren’t.  You may wonder about the no dump rule.  This park, because it exists across a valley, uses lift pumps for sewage.  In several low areas in the park, there are buried tanks with power and pumps to take sewage from full hookup sites and pump it uphill to wherever the sewage system or connection to municipal system is located.  One of these tanks had “water” overflowing out of it during the power outage.  There were no backup generators on site.

While walking dogs, we saw a couple of dump hoses in the top of the dumpster that had been broken in half – with solid ice sticking out.  I presume someone tried the “leave the faucet dripping” routine which is absolutely NOT the thing to do in an RV.  We saw multiple burst water filters on our dog walks as well.

I’m thinking the next blog will be about power management in RVs.

Watching the local news, it seems we are lucky to still have our power now, over 48 hours without dropping.  Perhaps because of how far south we are or simply the county we happen to be parked in.

Rambling in the West

So, these blogs are usually written over a several day stretch, sometimes a week or more period because it seems sometimes like there isn’t that much happening. Then days like today, things happen that make me want to sit down and write a bunch.  More on that later.

Capital Reef From Boondocking
Capital Reef

We’ve finally made it to a decent boondocking spot.  We spent much of the last few months moving among Thousand Trails and related parks in Washington and Oregon.  When we left (driven out by smoke), we spent a few days at Iron Springs, near Cedar City, UT.  It was a fairly new, standard design park – with pretty good WiFi – which is unusual, and some real cool iron sculptures.  They are worth driving out and seeing them.  Before that, we spent one night at a place on the other side of town that, in our rush, we didn’t get around to researching cell signals, and thus we had to bail.  There was none.  Well, not none – with my directional antenna I got a full 6 bars, but less than 1kbit per second of data.  That’s not even good enough for email.  At least the smoke that is here, is a couple of levels better than Cedar City and way better than the Bend area in Oregon.  The day we left, ended up being a really long day.  On top of being a 7+ hour trip, we had to deal with one of the towed cars not charging.  Stopping and running it and letting it charge for 10-15 minutes would get us a couple of hours of tow time, maybe.  In the end, we just unhooked and drove it.

Campsite at Capital Reef
Campsite at Capital Reef

We did manage to change the oil in both generators before we left Iron Springs.  We are using them out here – along with our Solar.  But the smoke out here is still quite noticeable and we don’t get full power from our panels.  They DO however help with power and we are glad to have them.  On a good day, solar provides the equivalent of two hours of generator time.  Other, cloudy days, more like one.  Our solar install details are here, here and here.

Oh, where are we?  We are parked outside Capital Reef, on a hill, on BLM land and have already made several safari trips into and through this amazing park.

It is dusty here.  No grass.  We don’t need A/C most of the time – just a couple of hours in the afternoon on sunny days.  Most people out here (this is a busy place) are considerate, but just tonight, some guy parked his Class C ACROSS a road.  There is an alternate access to that road just past where he is parked, but sometimes I just have to wonder how totally unconscious people manage to drive across this country and stay alive.  At least he didn’t park across railroad tracks.

Repairs continue.  Today it was a little wooden stable for a granddaughter that had fallen apart.  And a cover for my daughter’s diffuser.  Before we left the last park, it was a connection in a fresh-water tank overflow.  And here it was running a new power line for the towed connector on their RV.  The car charged fine while towing for 6 months – then started to fail, then quit.  We traced the pin to a wire, to the bundle of splices where it connected into the Ford wiring loom.  No power there at all.  The wire it was spliced into had an RV manufacturer-installed label:  wait for it – “Interior Lights”.  It looked like an 18-gauge wire.  Black wire with a blue stripe.  We checked EVERY fuse we could find in the RV.  We looked everywhere we could for a black wire with a blue stripe – nope, none to be found.  In the end, we grabbed an inline fuse, a spool of wire, and ran a new connection from the house battery compartment to the tow connector pigtail.  The towed car uses an RVI battery to battery charger, so it’s a safe connection.  Because the house is Lithium, and the care, of course, lead acid, you shouldn’t really just plug one into the other.  The manufacturer, of course, Nexus, was completely useless as a resource.

Then there was installing an electric fireplace in the daughter’s RV – a straightforward job as one can be when you have to work with the tools and supplies that happen to be on the RV.

Next, we need to do some more work on the Kayak tie-downs.  What we have is working, just a bit more hassle hooking up than necessary.  My daughter had bought “j-hook”s for carrying their kayak.  It never really fit well.  In the end, we created a couple of carpet-covered boards that the kayak can be slid on from the rear of the car and tied down.  Some tweaking of our kayak continues but in general, we really like the roller supports.

Yesterday some of us took a hike (Deb wasn’t feeling well) down the east side of Grand Wash atGrand Wash, Capital Reef Capital reef.  It’s cool walking down the narrow canyon with the walls a couple of hundred feet above.Hot buss bar

So today?  Well for some time I’ve been feeling like the power numbers were a little off.  Sometimes the battery monitor didn’t show fully charged with the generator was topping off the batteries – and it was taking a little too long to charge.  Things weren’t adding up, but it wasn’t broken so I didn’t pay enough attention to it.

So today, we are fixing lunch.  We have the Ninja Grill running and the microwave.  Should be ok, with the generator running, right?  But the inverter/charger was also charging the batteries.  The generator has two 30-amp circuits.  The air conditioners were off, but the TV, Apple TV, maybe waterMelted Inverter switch heater, a computer and misc were also on.  A circuit breaker on the generator popped off.  And the Inverter tried and failed to pick up the load.

Ok, so I had made a mistake, or two.  One – our Inverter is a 3k Victron – not the 2K that came with the rig.  It has the ability if you limit its power input – to use battery power to make up the difference.  But for that to work right, you have to set a limit on how much AC power it can draw.  I had left mine to 50 amps because we were hooked up to 50 for so long.  The generator breakers are 30-amp.

The two cooking appliances were pulling close to 30 amps by themselves, plus other things when the breaker popped.  Yes, we should have been managing our usage better.  But when I reset – nothing.  I checked the inverter – no lights.  I checked power at the infamous DC power panel next to the batteries – and the Inverter power switch was open/failed.  As I was taking it apart (which necessitates removing the power in the buss bar from the fuse – I noticed the fuse bolt was NOT TIGHT!  I replaced the switch (I had a spare because I still plan on replacing that entire panel).  But when the Inverter switch was off – I’d get voltage through the fuse to the switch.  When the switch was on – I’d get nothing.  Then I realized the buss bar from the fuse to the inverter switch had been hot.  Again.  Same problem we encountered on the beach at S. Padre island that caused me to scrounge parts at a West Marine to bypass the fuse.

The inverter switch showed the same melted plastic around the input bolt and the buss bar show signs of having been hot.  While the switch specs say – up to 300 amps continuous and up to 500 intermittent – should be ok for 3000 watts for our normal use, it has turned out to be insufficient for a 3k inverter.  The specs for the inverter say to use a 400 amp fuse.  The specs also say that continuous output is 3k – but can burst up to 6000.  That would be 460 amps – which is still under the switch’s specification.  The buss bar however showed signs of being hot – insulation was bubbled.  The nut holding the bar to the fuse was barely hand tight, so it seems to me that again, the fuse had again gotten too hot.  I couldn’t remove the fuse – it seemed glued (melted) to the underlying buss bar.  The way this is constructed – a bolt has a plastic washer that insulates it from the underlying buss bar.  The fuse is slipped over the bolt.  Then the top buss bar that passes current to the switch goes on, then a nut that holds it all together.  Power passes bar to fuse to bar via flat surfaces held together only with a 7/16 nut and tiny bolt.  Steel bolt.  Aluminum bars.  Who knows what the fuse it made out of internally – externally, structurely, it’s a form of plastic, with probably copper parts.  I suspect over time thermal changes work it loose.  The higher currents associated with Lithium batteries and 3k instead of 2k inverter exacerbate problems built into inferior quality equipment.

When we were at Red Bay and had them replace the entire panel – I had them leave the cable and fuse we had created as a bypass.  They just heavily insulated the end of the cable and left it.  So, I again, bypassed the failing fuse and used the makeshift cable+fuse to provide power to the new inverter switch.

It’s scary when things break in the middle of the desert, an hour or more from any decent hardware store.  Even scarier when these parts are simply not available in most hardware or even RV parts stores.

We did get some rain today – just enough to raise the humidity a tiny bit and cool things off, but ten minutes later, there was no evidence of rain at all, except the dark clouds receding to the east.

And a few days later….. It started to get pretty cold up there on top of Capital Reef.  So we headed south again – to northern Arizona.  We had reservations at a Thousand Trails campground outside of Cottonwood, AZ.  They had nice large 50 amp sites up on top of the hill and not so nice cramped, 30 amp sites down the hill.  Cell service was only marginal down the hill.  We had planned to spend lots of time in this park, but despite a number of the 50-amp sites being empty, none were available to us.  Generally, we’ve had good experiences with Thousand Trails, but this is the second time we’ve left a TT park early because of our experience there.

We found a nice, new park just a mile away with an attractive monthly rate and plan to be here for a month or two.  Cell is great and we hear good WiFi is on its way.  A Thousand Trails membership is a significant investment – and we need to be able to use them a lot to make it pay.  But here at least, we are better off paying a monthly rate than staying in a substandard TT park.

Bryce
Bryce
Boondocking spot outside of Bryce
Boondocking spot outside of Bryce

More repairs:  The driver’s side mirror was loose at its base.  What a nightmare.  It is held in by four bolts (actually three bolts with nuts inside and one sheet metal screw).  One bolt/nut was buried under 6 inches of spray foam in the engine compartment.  Another is hidden somewhere in the dash, also in the engine compartment.  A third is inside, under the dash – all of those have a loose NUT on the inside.  A fourth self-drilling screw also was used – I never found just where it entered the coach on the inside.  Did I mention – that spray foam was full of wiring, so it had to be removed very carefully.  Hours later, the mirror was fully tightened down and resealed.  I’m sure the design engineers at Tiffin didn’t say “Just bury that entire corner in the engine compartment with spray foam”.  Nor did they think about how hard it would actually be to ever replace or even just tighten the mirror.  Just an inch or so different position and a little more care running wires and foaming would have made the job so much easier.

Kayak’s again – we’ve had several more outings and we are all getting better and launching and paddling  We’ve taken the dogs with us.  Murphy is still a bit anxious but getting better  We also realized that putting our kayak on the truck with just four mounting points was starting to push the bottom of the kayak in – so we created two carpet covered rails to hold the kayak just like we made for the k

And forest fires seem to follow us.  This one at least was about 50 miles away from us.  In this photo – it’s still 0% contained.

We plan to head to Texas at the end of this month (Oct-2020).

 

Mike