Generators are loud. Propane is quiet. I like quiet.Jim
Some are into solar big time me I don't want the stuff covering my roof,hard for me to understand people spending 1000's of dollars for solar and batteries on bus one uses for a few weeks out of the year, I see in campgrounds RV's covered with solar and plugged in to 50 amps, then it's their money they are spending not mine
Batteries - silent!Clifford, you crack me up sometimes. How on earth can you make such judgemental statements with no basis? It is about as out there as claiming 90% of RV owners make no sense spending stupid amounts of money to do the same thing. Anyway, I am into solar and batteries and the freedom of fully off grid capability. Just came back from two weeks at a campground that had hookups. Never needed to plug into it. 100% self contained. that is very satisfying in itself, not counting the masssive amount of money saved researching and DIY.
My conversion is all electric. I'm installing a vertical suburban 38k furnace in old ac bay. The stove is two electric units. May change over to propane there also. But seriously considering inductive units. I like propane furnaces, because they are reliable, and require little maintenance. Also don't need a Webasto or Aqua hot guru when problems occur. I'm still on the fence on the small diesel heaters, as I've followed them on the Facebook site, and they can have their issues too, even the best ones. If propane doesn't provide enough heat, I can run Generator and use toe kick heaters to supplement, plus heat strips in rooftop units. I do have a defroster unit though with a brand new core, which costs about $425 bucks a few years back. Radiator shop had to call his supplier with dimensions to get it, Han matches original core, including number and size of rows of tubes. Besides, I don't camp in below freezing weather any more. Mostly plug in in campgrounds. We are members of Boondockers and their other one, but in our two summers of extensive travel in tt, only used it twice. Always felt like a freeloader at them or buying something there was almost as much as a campground.
Since my ultimate goal is chasing 70 degree weather around the country and going heavy in on solar I went pure electric on my bus.