Nice. Keep an I on your extension cord temperature. If the load in your camper gets excessive, such as running a small heater and other general loads, the extension cord can overheat. I did this same thing in winter time and the cord melted its way through 6 in of snow overnight. 😉😁
Very nice. I was curious how the wall landed on the two bed unit. Your solutions seems very good. Thanks for the visual. Side note: When you convert down with that kind of dog bone, remember you have cut your power input by half. So let your battery charge longer than usual. For us... when summer and cleaning it, we could not put on the a/c with that type. We boondock other wise so the a/c doesn’t matter otherwise.
You should note that when you convert to the regular extension cord, at least use a 12 gauge wire extension cord that will carry the full 15 house amps without overheating. A cheap 16 gauge extension cord would be a bad idea. It might even run an AC or microwave individually if you have them, but never together. A good idea for plugging in at a house or backyard, but keep the extension cord as short as possible.
I use both methods. If the ground is only slightly tilted then I use the stabilisers to level the trailer front to back and side to side. If the ground is quite slanted, then I back one of the trailer tires onto leveling blocks and finish leveling with the stabilisers.
@@BothellTim Gotcha - never thought to use the stabilisers for levelling before as the owner's manual said not to - but I think you're on the money there with using them if there's only a slight tilt - surely wouldn't hurt
Nice. Keep an I on your extension cord temperature. If the load in your camper gets excessive, such as running a small heater and other general loads, the extension cord can overheat. I did this same thing in winter time and the cord melted its way through 6 in of snow overnight. 😉😁
Thanks for the heads-up.
I especially like your solution to the glaring light. We never use the fixtures because they are blinding. Great suggestions!
Bench great idea we just bought a frame thanks
Very nice. I was curious how the wall landed on the two bed unit. Your solutions seems very good. Thanks for the visual. Side note: When you convert down with that kind of dog bone, remember you have cut your power input by half. So let your battery charge longer than usual. For us... when summer and cleaning it, we could not put on the a/c with that type. We boondock other wise so the a/c doesn’t matter otherwise.
Thanks for the insight on the dog bone power extension.
Great alterations
You should note that when you convert to the regular extension cord, at least use a 12 gauge wire extension cord that will carry the full 15 house amps without overheating. A cheap 16 gauge extension cord would be a bad idea. It might even run an AC or microwave individually if you have them, but never together. A good idea for plugging in at a house or backyard, but keep the extension cord as short as possible.
Very good video. Thank you.
Who is David?
I have enough fluff in my bottom….😂
Very helpful. Thanks!
Good video
Are you using those stabilisers to level the trailer? Or will you have levelling ramps to do that?
I use both methods. If the ground is only slightly tilted then I use the stabilisers to level the trailer front to back and side to side. If the ground is quite slanted, then I back one of the trailer tires onto leveling blocks and finish leveling with the stabilisers.
@@BothellTim Gotcha - never thought to use the stabilisers for levelling before as the owner's manual said not to - but I think you're on the money there with using them if there's only a slight tilt - surely wouldn't hurt
@@BothellTim I just got my Scout lite. I like stabilizer idea. . Cant you tell me which one you ordered and any other inf9 for mechanic?