How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storage

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rubberrat
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1922Post rubberrat
November 7th, 2014, 8:57 pm

Zildjian and I have Karossers with all manner of stuff on the roof, two roof racks, a solar Panel, Heiki roof light and an ariel in my case, so if we throw a cover on we get two nice big paddling pools.
I do stand it slightly off centre without the cover, but with a cover on, no amount of angle would fix it.
Chevrolet 3.0 LUV Tischer Trail 200

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zildjian
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1923Post zildjian
November 7th, 2014, 9:07 pm

I did look at even standing an airbag/jack I bought years ago centrally on roof and just inflate it beneath cover once a week over winter, but its bound to get forgotten and the rooftop pool find its way in through roof as a deluge.

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zildjian
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1924Post zildjian
November 7th, 2014, 9:16 pm

martinjdover wrote:There's a simple way to stop water pooling on the roof. Don't keep the camper level and put it at a slight crossfall both sideways and forwards to let the water run off - simples!

Martin
ah missed your post here,

No what it is, the roof has a faux luggage rack running around the perimeter, inside that two skylights couple of solar panels,
folding sat dish,
everything I've tried so far to 'tent' a cover over this roof furniture always left it at lowest outside edge prone to slump back within the rack which
acts perfectly as an impromptu pool wall and you end up with a puddle down either long side of the campers roof just waiting to use its volume to find a way in!

better I suspect to leave it all off and let the rainwater just run away (as you say) slightly forward tilted to ensure it runs off

martinjdover
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1926Post martinjdover
November 7th, 2014, 10:05 pm

Ummm, mines not so much a problem as I don't have the perimeter rails. I too have roof lights solar panels etc but even with a cover on as long as I tip her forwards and sideways a bit - its only lowering one jack by a couple of inches and raising the diagonally opposite one to take the weight again. The cover doesn't pool at all.

This post has made me remember to empty my water tank - yes even down here on the south coast it does get cold occassionally!

Martin

FinAde
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1942Post FinAde
November 8th, 2014, 8:41 pm

With the discussions on water pooling when using tarpaulins....we checked our roof today after the recent downpours.
This is what we found :o

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Tischer 230
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zildjian
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1943Post zildjian
November 8th, 2014, 8:55 pm

Blimey and I thought mine was bad,
that must've been a welcome site after all your hard work :shock:

FinAde
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1944Post FinAde
November 8th, 2014, 9:01 pm

We did wonder why the tarp was tight and we couldn't adjust it. Submersible pump sorted the pond!
All the hard work is virtually finished, back on its legs now.
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zildjian
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1965Post zildjian
November 10th, 2014, 10:06 pm

OK so,
drained the fresh water tank/left taps open,
emptied flush tank & emptied cassette,
re-siliconed widow frames (tops)

you didn't mention the awning BTW, should we unroll and inspect for leaves etc and I think I might try and seal it up afterwards against weather

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rubberrat
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 1967Post rubberrat
November 10th, 2014, 10:30 pm

Good call. if its rolled away wet them mould will grow and its tough to shift.
Roll it out, clean it and let it dry properly.
Roll away. Pallet wrap should make a good winter seal.
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Madmountainman
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Re: How to prepare your Demountable Camper for Winter Storag

Post: # 7143Post Madmountainman
July 12th, 2015, 7:02 pm

rubberrat wrote:
If you have Alde ‘wet’ heating then this may need attention as some of the feed pipes run close to the access hatch and could freeze. I keep my camper at home so instead of draining down I run the heating on low if it’s likely to be below freezing for a few days. If your camper is stored in a storage facility, then drain it down.

If you plan to run the heating, this is a good time to check the water level..

Image

Top up above the MIN mark if low.

If you need to drain down, locate the dump valve in the service hatch.

Image
As i'm new to this, forgive any questions already covered. Do I take it that the Alde Hot Water Dump Valve just dumps the fresh water in its' system, leaving the central heating fluid, which contains glycol, inside, ready for use still? I don't want to go pushing/pulling any levers until i'm sure of what the outcome will be. If that's the case, is there also a priming process you have to go through to get the hot water up and running again?

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