Having just spent our second weekend away in a FC, both of which have been absolutely freezing, we've realised that we need to invest in some form of heating which can be left on all night. We do have a halogen heater, but don't want to leave it on all night because of the light it creates.
Towsure have 3 types of heater in their catalogue and I've no idea what to buy (or whether Towsure are the best place?).
Any advice would be greatly appreciated - we hope that our next trip out at the end of May will be warmer at night but I'm not taking any chances!
Hi, we purchased a Sterling from a dear old couple who had a lot of experience camping and provided us with two heaters with the camper. One is a Pyramid electric heater with cut out switch underneath should it topple and the other is a catalytic Propane Gas one of which we haven't tried yet. Hope it helpd.
we just got back from our secound wekend away in the fc, have decided the fan heater is no good, makes the air too dry, wake up with sore eyes, headache and dry mouth. gonna try a small oil filled radiator amd fan heater if needed.
We have a fan heater for the evenings etc but don't leave it on over night. We have good sleeping bags so don't need anything else, but many people use oil filled radiators for overnight use which are considered safer and of course are quiet.
We have a fan heater which we plug in and use on a plug timer switch which keeps the camper warm all night but sometimes we use a halogen heater but they only seem to keep warm what the heat touches.
When on electric we have a blow heater for a quick blast of heat, an oiled filled radiator (1.5kw) for overnight. If no electric then we use the gas hob to take off any chill then once in the sllepping bag then all is usually fine.
We bought some of that under laminate floor white insulation - you know the thin stuff and place some under each bed to add extra insulation.
On our folding camper sometimes you get a draught where the bed slides are so i bought some pipe lagging and place a length down each side of the bed to stop draughts.
We used a blow heater - thermostatically controlled at a lower heat than through the day - just so that we didn't wake with chattering teeth, or go to the loo in too cold a temperature. We had the Pathfinder and put the blow heater in the access opening.
invest in good sleeping bags and use a down quilt / fleece and or mohair blanket - very light - on top - add a hot water bottle and a full set of helly hansen thermals under PJs - and you can be pretty warm in Scotland in April - we have never left a heater on overnight - we use the halogen to heat all the stuff just before getting into sleeping bag
We bought a panel heater from one of the stores like Comet for about £10 and it is great. It is switchable from 500 watts to 2 kw but does not have the weight of an oil filled rad.
Overnight it is perfectly safe as the elements are behind metal panels.
The EHU supply on camp sites is usually 10 amps which is 2500 watts or 2.5 kw but we only use it on 500 watts or 2 amps overnight.
We also have a fan heater but it is too noisy for overnight.
I also have a hat which I can wear in bed in emergencies if it is cold.