Airstream Generator Installation

Posted on
Airstream Generator Installation 3,6/5 7217 reviews

EasyStart™ Rocks At The 60th Wally Byam Airstream Club International RallyThe 60th Wally Byam Caravan Club International (WBCCI) Rally kicked-off at Michigan’s Upper Peninsula State Fairgrounds in Escanaba on July 22-29, 2017.The WBCCI has over 12,000 members in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Europe. WBCCI is the oldest RV club in the country, said WBCCI Public Relations Director John Freking.Airstreams arrived from all over turning the Michigan fairgrounds into a Silver City.As reported by the Escanaba Daily Press, the week-long Airstream rally was jammed with various activities, vendors, and much more.

Over 600 trailers were there, with dozens pouring in each day.Challenge - Airstream RVers Want EasyStart™For almost a year, many on the Air Forums have been posting EasyStart™ success stories and questions on; how to run their 13.5K or 15K compressor on a Honda EU2000i?At Micro-Air, Andy Spaziani and Matteo Giovanetti, top engineers from Micro-Air, wanted to meet their customers and this rally was the perfect event. They provided live EasyStart™ demonstrations, and installations to attendees. The team provided a technical seminar to over 25 Airstream RVers.53 EasyStart™ Installations In 6 Days At The Michigan Airstream RallyExhibit booth mornings were shared with Lew “Lewster” Farber, a well-recognized Airstream Solar Power System Installation Dealer. Back to back product demonstrations, explanations, plus scheduling what seemed like unending afternoon installations became the daily agenda.Soon, news spread through Silver City like all good campground chatter.

Options

“ EasyStart™ easily starts with Honda EU2000i generator and all brands of rooftop air conditioners.” Several “caravan” groups were camping together and once one member installed an EasyStart™, then other neighbors wanted the solution installed too.Huge demand stretched the 3-man team’s capacity to meet all the installation requests.This challenge kept them on top of Airstreams into the evening. Fortunately, northern Michigan summer evening light enabled them to provide more installations.Because of the unending list of Airstream requests, every afternoon for 6 days Matteo, Lew and Andy were very busy at the camp ground with multiple installations. Bie rose stencil. Joyful Airstream CampersLike all events, it was soon time to leave. Micro-Air had made a lot of new Airstream friends. Andy summed it up, “ With each EasyStart™ installation, air conditioner start-up problems were eliminated and happy Airstream campers headed onto their next adventure. I’m glad we got to meet and help all our new friends in the Airstream community.

We’ll definitely be back next year for the WBCCI International Rally to be held in Salem, OR.”To share this story in a PDF format.Upcoming events:Micro-Air will be present at the following events. Please feel free to stop by our area to ask any questions you may have, view our products in more detail and see how they make your RV adventures more pleasurable. The in Louisville, KY.

Sorry to those of you who are awaiting pretty pictures from our Death Valley trip this week. I’m going to get to that later. In this blog it’s only practical stuff.Winter is a good time to talk about all things electrical because it’s extra relevant now. We like to camp off-grid a lot, and this time of year it’s tricky to make it work.The problem is a double-whammy: our solar panels collect a lot less energy due to low sun angle and shorter days, and our usage goes up because we need the lights and furnace for those long nights.The easy solution is to go find some place with hookups, but our main criterion is to go where we want to go, not just where it’s convenient. For example, we wanted to spend four nights in Death Valley, and three nights at Point Mugu State Park (Thornhill Broome beach), and neither of our chosen locations offers electricity.A reader recently asked why we don’t just carry a generator rather than messing about with solar panels, inverters, battery banks, and all that expensive stuff. The answer boils down to personal style.

We had a nice quiet Honda eu1000i generator many years ago and it was a nice safety net when we really needed some power. But we don’t have a pickup truck (so we are space constrained) and I hated having a gasoline-fueled appliance in the back of the SUV.I also didn’t like having to run a generator when we were camped in a bucolic & quiet place. The sound and fumes were just too obtrusive in those settings. My friend compares it to the yipping of a little dog–not really loud but just enough to gradually fray the nerves.The final straw came during a visit to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, where (at least at the time) generator hours were during the peak of the day. We wanted to go hiking but didn’t feel good about leaving the generator running while we were gone.

So we sat around the Airstream waiting for the batteries to recharge while the Great Outdoors went unexplored.On that day we looked at the sun shining abundantly while the generator was throbbing away, and decided it was time to get solar.Solar isn’t a perfect solution, it’s just the solution that fits our camping style best. It’s silent, free to operate, eco-friendly, and I don’t have to set it up or carry gas. It works anytime the sun is up, automatically.

But I have to admit there are times when a generator boost would be helpful. Winter is one of those times, and this past week was particularly challenging.That’s because we arrived in Death Valley with a problem. A “phantom load” was nipping away at our batteries.

If you haven’t heard this term before, a phantom load is a drain on the batteries that has no obvious cause. It’s different from a “parasitic” load, which is caused by certain electrical devices that never go completely off, like the stereo, the refrigerator circuit board, and the propane leak detector.From our handy Tri-Metric amp-hour meter I have learned that our parasitic load runs about 0.9 amps.

Airstream generator installation

When we arrived in Death Valley, that load mysteriously increased to 2.2 amps. That’s a real problem.Look at it this way: a typical Airstream trailer comes with a pair of Group 27 batteries (that’s a physical size, not power capacity). They might each be rated at 85 amp-hours capacity. But because you are only supposed to discharge them to half their capacity (for longest life), your net capacity from two batteries is just 85 amp-hours.A 2.2 amp constant drain means all of your useful power will be gone in about 38 hours–a mere day and a half— doing nothing at all. Anything you do to use power will only reduce the time till the batteries fail, so you might get just one day and night before finding you’re out of juice. I see people struggling with this all the time, and you can see their posts in online forums asking why their battery was dead after just one night of running the furnace.(The furnace, by the way, pulls about 7-10 amps depending on model, which adds up to a lot of power when you consider how long it runs on a cold night.

It’s one of the biggest DC power consumers in the trailer.)In our case, I made things worse by leaving our new inverter switched on during the tow. That added another 0.4 amps to the constant load. And then, because it was cold when we arrived in Death Valley, we ran the furnace for about 30 minutes.So despite being fully charged when we left Quartzsite, a few hours after we arrived at Death Valley our power was already down to 86%. That made for a bad start to our planned 4-night boondocking trip.That night I started tracing down the phantom load, and by pulling fuses and watching the Tri-Metric I was able to isolate it to a single circuit that powered the water pump, tank monitors, and external compartment lights. The problem turned out to be the front compartment light, which had become loose and was “leaking” voltage to the body of the Airstream.

If that doesn’t make sense, imagine a weak electrical short that isn’t quite enough to trip the fuse. I’ve never encountered this problem before or heard of anyone experiencing it, so I suspect it’s fairly rare.I pulled the fuse overnight to stop the bleeding, and Kyle and I fixed that the next morning by relocating the light. But the damage to our power reserve was done, and the short sunny days of winter meant we couldn’t make up for it. This time of year the best our solar panels can do is generate about 25 amp-hours on a sunny day.Our new Lifeline 8D battery has a capacity of 255 amp-hours, which gives us 127.5 amp-hours usable (remember, discharge no more than 50%). With a movie in the evening and a little furnace heating we were chewing up 45 amp-hours a day, so even with solar making up some of the power we were losing ground at the rate of about 20 amp-hours a day, which meant that after five nights we’d be done.That’s actually acceptable for us. Our goal isn’t to have endless power, only to extend our boondocking time.

To get five days from our battery and solar panels in the winter is just fine. (In the summer we do have endless power because of the long days, and have gone for weeks without plugging in.)We cut the loss down by turning off the furnace and using our catalytic heater instead, and limiting use of the inverter and computers.

Since we’d been ravaged by the phantom load early on, Kyle plugged us into his generator for a quick 20 amp-hour boost. The net result was that after our four nights in Death Valley the Tri-Metric said we still had 69% of our battery.But since we were planning to follow up with three nights on the Pacific coast, where sunshine is not quite as guaranteed as in the desert, we spent one night at a full hookup campground to get fully charged. After a few days in the desert, it’s also nice to have a full hookup to clean up everything and everybody.Now we are in our third day at the beach and it’s cloudy.

Airstream Generator Installation Guide

I had to log a lot of laptop time these past two days, and we ran the microwave last night, so we’re down to 43% of our usable power. That’s OK too. We won’t run out before we leave tomorrow, and we’ve succeeded in our goal of camping next to the Pacific Ocean, so I regard this as a success.This is just our story.

Airstream Generator Installation

It’s not the “best” solution for everyone. All that matters is that you can use your Airstream the way you want to. If that means going to full hookup sites exclusively, running a generator, or using solar panels, it’s all fine. Think about what you want to do and then you can decide the way you want to get there.Written by Categorized.

Thank you for this. I’ve just purchased a new 25′ flying cloud – haven’t even taken her out yet and am stressing over generators or solar. Such an investment either way. Pro’s and con’s with either decision. I think i’ve made up my mind one way, read something else, and swing the otherugh! I think your advice was to first upgrade the batteries? Do you have a suggestion?

Airstream

I am looking forward to boondocking and honestly this is stressing me out a little.and I’m going to need that relaxation!.RichLuhr says. I love your mention of Trimetric meter to accurately monitor battery usage. Debbie and I agree completely on preference for quiet solar. Nine years in, we find the 1,000 watt generator is nice to have and rare to use. Your description of the annoyance factor of an ostensibly quiet genset is spot on.With 250 watts solar and 464 amp hours battery rating, we had much more battery than we could recharge in a day or two.

This year I dropped two of the golf cart batteries. We now have 230 amp hours, enough for three or four days sans sun.