Monthly Archives: January 2014

Always Something to Learn

The big tent show in Quartzsite opened on Saturday. Donna and I rode over on the scooter. It’s about five miles east of our boondocking location. The traffic was heavy, but the scooter made it easy to get in and park near the entrance.

Our first order of business was to look at induction cooking. This was a topic we had no experience with. When we bought our coach, we were told it had a new induction cooktop. We knew that magnetic induction would only work with pans made from ferrous material. Non-magnetic materials such as aluminum alloy or stainless steel do not respond to induction – and that’s all we had. Before leaving the RV park in Mesa, Donna bought a Lodge 12″ cast-iron skillet* to try her hand at induction cooking. On Saturday morning, she struggled to cook bacon. The pan heated slowly and it took well over an hour to cook 12 strips of bacon! Something was clearly wrong here.

We spent a couple of hours sitting through a demo by Bob Welch of Healthcraft. Healthcraft manufactures cookware optimized for induction cooking. We watched as he boiled water in less than two minutes. He cooked a chicken breast in 13 minutes and made a waterless, greaseless side dish of cabbage, carrots and potatoes. The cookware isn’t cheap; in fact, it’s quite expensive. Healthcraft cookware is very high-quality, made in the USA (Kansas). Most of the production is sent to Japan, where induction cooking is popular. There are Chinese alternatives on the market for less money, but as usual, you get what you pay for.

Induction cooking is suited to RVs because it’s so efficient. It takes very little energy to create a hot pan because the energy is concentrated on the cookware, not radiated to the atmosphere. We couldn’t figure out why our cooktop didn’t work like Bob’s demo. After discussing this with him, he could only offer that either our pan was not pure cast iron or something was wrong with our cooktop. At the end of the day, he lent one of his expensive skillets to us to try out.

From there, we walked through about half of the show. We saw a few things we would return to purchase. We bought new sheets for our bed. When we returned home, we put the cooktop to the test. I put the Healthcraft pan on the cooktop and turned the dial to high. I added a cup of water. Ten minutes later, the water was hot but still not boiling. Something wasn’t right.

I removed the drawer below the cooktop and used a flashlight to find the model number on the bottom. Google led me to the Dometic site where I found the answer. This is not an induction cooktop! It looks like one, but it’s actually an electric radiant heat ceramic cooktop. It’s weak and heats very slowly. Dang, we’ve been hoodwinked! I want to believe that the dealer didn’t know any better and wasn’t trying to fool us. I’ll talk to them when we return to Mesa. The cooktop wasn’t something I could test when I was inspecting the coach because I didn’t have the proper cookware. I wasn’t too worried about it because it was new.

Yesterday, we went back to the big tent. We walked through the rest of the show. I learned something else and this time, it was good news. Our rig has a satellite dome on top. I wasn’t too keen on it, because I’m spoiled by HD programming and didn’t want to get a standard definition receiver. I talked to the guys at the Direct TV booth. They would give me a portable HD dish and receiver if I signed up for a 12-month subscription. This sounded pretty good, but I wanted to check around. The portable dish can be problematic – it has to aimed precisely to pick up the satellite signal.

At the Dish Network booth, the guy told me my satellite dome would receive HD transmission from the Dish Network satellite! This was news to me. I took away some literature and thought I should do more research before committing to anything. At another booth, there was an independent satellite TV installer. They were authorized to install both Direct TV and Dish Network. The woman there gave me the straight scoop.

She told me my dome satellite antenna would receive HD from Dish Network, but could only process one channel at a time. This means the front TV and bedroom TV would be on the same channel, unless I used over-the-air antenna reception for one of the TVs. She told me they would send a tech out to our site, install an HD Dish Network receiver and make sure we had a good signal. All I had to do was sign up for Dish Network through them. She gave me literature and I brought it home with me to do more research.

I looked up our Winegard Roadtrip Minimax dome online. I found out that she was correct. It will function exactly as she said. Today, I’m signing up. I missed the NFL conference playoffs yesterday since we can’t get any over-the-air reception here at Dome Rock. The satellite receiver will change that. Our Winegard dome automatically seeks the proper satellite and locks in.

We bought a new Thermo Shield mattress pad for our bed. We almost passed on it because it was bulky and would be hard to transport on the scooter. The owner of the company, Jay Jensen, told us he would deliver to our location at Dome Rock, no charge!

Our last stop was back at Bob’s booth. Donna ordered the Healthcraft cookware. Later, I ordered a two-burner induction cooktop which I will install in our coach. We’re having the items shipped to a friend’s house in Mesa and will pick them up next week.

While I was researching and ordering online, we had a surprise phone call. Our friends, Keith and Suzanne Gallaway from Phoenix, were in the area and wanted to stop by. They were on their way home from a weekend at Lake Havasu. Keith is the service manager at Lunde’s Peoria Volkswagen. They have a large trailer that is all decked out in VW graphics that they sell VW Driver Gear out of. Last weekend, there was a big VW meet at Lake Havasu called Buses by the Bridge. I think Keith told me there was somewhere around 370 old VW buses there. They attend several VW enthusiast shows each year and sell the VW Driver Gear clothing and accessories.

Keith and the VW Driver Gear Trailer

Keith and the VW Driver Gear Trailer

They are thinking about buying an RV and traveling the country. They run a business called Cruise Planner where they offer various cruise vacation packages. You can check out their web site at travelthing.com.

It was fun having an unexpected visit. Keith and Suzanne gifted me a cool VW bus T-shirt. While we were checking out the trailer, Jay Jensen drove up in his pick-up truck and delivered our mattress pad.

Last night, we grilled sweet Italian chicken sausage for dinner served with zucchini and tomatoes.

Sweet Italian chicken sausage with zucchini and tomatoes

Sweet Italian chicken sausage with zucchini and tomatoes

Today, I’ll go back to the big tent and sign up for Dish Network. I also want to pick up a couple of camp chairs we looked at. Fun in the sun here in Arizona.

High, thin clouds made a spectacular sunset last night

High, thin clouds made a spectacular sunset last night

By the way, the new header photo is courtesy of Suzanne Gallaway.

 

*Just so you know, if you decide to purchase one of these through the Amazon link in this post, I’ll earn a small commission. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

 

 

 

Running on Empty

I spent most of the day Thursday preparing to move to Quartzsite. Donna had a number of errands. She rode the scooter to take a piano lesson from the teacher she had when we lived in Mesa. Then she stopped at Bed, Bath and Beyond. She must have enjoyed shopping there since she spent more than an hour in the store. When she returned and dropped off the goods from Bed, Bath and Beyond, she rode over to Sprouts and bought groceries. She came back from Sprouts with the scooter loaded. The under-seat storage compartment was full, she had a full grocery sack on the hook between her knees and a full backpack – $125 worth of groceries.

Grocery getter

Grocery getter

Then she walked across the street to WalMart and bought more! From WalMart she stopped at the salon in the strip mall for a mani-pedi. – a treat to herself for getting her edited manuscript back to her publisher. I walked over to the nail shop to retrieve the groceries.

Friday we were up and at it by 8am. I finished packing  a few odds and ends, then dumped and flushed our holding tanks. I put the wheel on the trailer jack. This made hooking the trailer up to the coach really easy. We rolled out of the RV park at 9:30.

While we traveled west on I-10, I was looking at the price of diesel fuel at truck stops. Near Tonopah, I glanced at the fuel gauge. I couldn’t understand why it looked like we had more fuel than when we left. Suddenly I realized this fuel gauge reads opposite of our old coach. I thought the fuel level was nearly full. Not so – it was nearly empty!

We had just passed a truck stop with diesel fuel at $3.71/gallon. The next exit was a couple of miles down the road. I took the exit and backtracked to the truck stop. I put $300 worth of fuel in the tank (80 gallons) and got back on the road. I was panicking about the fuel level because fuel gauges aren’t the most accurate instrument. Having never filled this tank, I didn’t know if we would be out of fuel right when the needle hit “E” or not. Eighty gallons of  fuel in our 100-gallon tank put the gauge near the full mark, so we probably could have gone another 120 miles or so.

About 10 miles east of Quartzsite, we started seeing groups of RVs boondocking in the desert. Some of the groups had signs – they obviously had pre-arranged a meet-up in the desert. Others seemed to just gravitate near each other. This is common. Although people take their RVs to the desert to get away from it all, they seem to still want some sort of association with other RVers out there – maybe there’s a sense of safety in numbers or just a need for social interaction.

Before we knew it, we rolled right through Quartzsite. We saw the big tent on the south side of I-10, near US95. This is where the vendors will be concentrated over the next 10 days. We pulled off of I-10 at the Dome Rock exit, about five miles west of town. We drove slowly back towards Quartzsite on the frontage road on the south side of the freeway.

We saw clusters of RVs and checked the access roads. The roads are just trails in the dirt and rock of the desert. I didn’t want to pull into a road that I couldn’t get turned around on. Backing the trailer onto the frontage road would be a real pain.

We found a likely looking spot and pulled off the road. I temporarily parked and we got out to reconnoiter the area on foot. After hiking around for about 20 minutes, we had a plan. We rolled a few hundred yards south of the road and parked the coach on a fairly level ridge top. We’re situated with the coach facing east, bringing the morning sunrise through the windshield. Our door and awning face to the south. It’s a nice spot. We don’t have anyone within 100 yards of us, but that could change as RVs are still pulling in and looking for a good site.

Our little piece of desert

Our little piece of desert

View from our door step

View from our door step

Donna fixed a chicken wrap with avocado for an afternoon snack, then we rode the scooter to the big tent. Friday was still a set-up day for the vendors – the show starts Saturday. We walked in and looked around. It seemed like we were the only ones previewing the show. It wasn’t completely set up yet, but Donna bought a hand-operated food chopper (salsa maker) from one of the vendors. When we were leaving, a security guy asked if we had vendor badges. He told us we couldn’t be there without them. We thanked him and left.

The Texas Star - a really cool old Flxible bus converted to an RV

The Texas Star – a really cool old Flxible bus converted to an RV – is one of our neighbors.

Last evening, we had cocktails outside and watched the sunset. It was very peaceful. After dinner, we continued with another episode of Breaking Bad. We are so totally hooked on this series.

Cocktail hour

Cocktail hour

Today, we’ll head back to the big tent and maybe look around town as well. Other than that, we have no plans.

Sunset at Dome Rock

Sunset at Dome Rock

 

Not Bored

People have asked me what I will do to keep from being bored in retirement. So far, boredom hasn’t been an issue. There are always people to meet, places to go or things to do. Having things to do isn’t always fun stuff though. The past few days, I’ve been working in the basement compartments. This is hard on the back and shoulders.

Yesterday, I washed our cargo trailer and the scooter. With the scooter clean and shiny, I rode it to WalMart where I bought an oil drain pan. My old oil drain pan was stolen when Those Dirty, Rotten Thieves took our trailer. I also picked up a gallon of Shell Rotella 15w-40 diesel motor oil for the motorhome. When the dipstick on the Cummins ISL engine in the motorhome shows the oil level at the add mark, you don’t add a quart like you would in a car. You add a gallon. The oil capacity of the Cummins ISL is more than six gallons!

I stopped at a motorcycle shop and bought two quarts of Amsoil MCF 10w-40 oil for the scooter. I also bought 75 – 90 weight synthetic GL-5 gear oil for the gear box on the scooter. Last week I ordered oil filters from the scooter from Amazon.com, they arrived on Monday. Changing the oil, oil filter and gear oil on the scooter kept me busy for a while. The Kymco scooter manual calls for oil change intervals of 3,000 miles. Although this seems short to me, I’ll follow the recommended interval.

Meanwhile, the interior of the coach is taking shape as Donna gets things organized. She’s been equally busy – riding her bike and running daily in preparation for a duathlon, practicing piano, and working. She finished editing her 13th book yesterday and is feeling good about that. Also this week, she contributed, upon request from editors, some organizing tips for articles that will appear in Real Simple magazine and at Glo.com.

Today, I’ll reorganize the cargo trailer. We’ve moved a few more things to the trailer. I’ll need to have everything in its place by the end of the day so I can load the scooter. I’ll also break out the extension ladder and get on the roof of the coach. I need to lube the Wineguard folding TV antenna – the gear on it is a little stiff. I also want to measure our high point, which is the satellite dome. Once I know our overall height, I can program that information into our Rand McNally RVND 7720 GPS.* I also need to update our weight in the GPS. I don’t know our exact axle weights right now, I’ll program the maximum gross vehicle weight of 31,000 lbs. This coach is capable of towing an additional 10,000 lbs. for a gross combined weight of 41,000lbs. The Rand McNally GPS takes height, weight and length into consideration when mapping our routes.

This is all in preparation of pulling out tomorrow. We’ll head west on I-10 about 140 miles to the town of Quartzsite. I don’t know our exact stopping point. At the intersection of I-10 and US95, we’ll probably take US95 south and look for a piece of desert to stake out.

The little town of Quartzsite becomes a hot bed of activity in January and February. There are gem and mineral shows, swap meets and of course, the big RV show. Vendors come from all over to cater to the thousands of RVs in Quartzsite at this time of year. According to Wikipedia, more than 1.5 million visitors come to Quartzsite annually, most of them visit in January and February. That’s a lot of visitors for a town with a population of around 4,000 people.

I lifted this information from the official Town of Quartzsite web page, they claim a higher number of visitors:

Over 2 Million Visitors a Year!

Quartzsite, Arizona, barely 18 miles east of the Colorado river, on I-10, may be the RV boondocking capital of the world. Quartzsite has become a mecca to visitors and exhibitors for rocks, gems, mineral specimens and fossils during the town’s famous two-month-long gem show and swap meet every January and February. From its humble beginnings the now-massive Quartzsite show has grown to RV-epic proportions with vendors offering everything under the Quartzsite sun.

I’ve heard many estimates of the number of visitors and RVs around Quartzsite. I doubt if anyone really has an accurate count. Hopefully we can find a suitable place to boondock on the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) public land around Quartzsite. We don’t know how long we’ll stay there. We aren’t sure of where we’ll go afterwards other than to say we’ll be back in the Phoenix area. We’ll find our way on the fly.

I’ll close today’s post with a picture of a coach that pulled in a couple of sites down from us the other day. It’s a 1998 Featherlite Vantare built on a 45′ Prevost chassis, powered by a hot-rodded 60 Series Detroit Diesel putting out more than 600 horsepower. I spoke to the owner. He is the original owner and has traveled all over the country (including a trip to Alaska) with his wife in the coach. They are from North Dakota where he ran a trucking business. I love these coaches, but with a price well over a million dollars (new) and several hundred thousand dollars used, I doubt if I will ever own one.

1998 Featherlite Vantare

1998 Featherlite Vantare

 

*Just so you know, if you decide to purchase one of these through the Amazon link in this post, I’ll earn a small commission. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Lost and Found

Yesterday, I continued packing things in the basement compartments. It takes a bit of trial and error to get it right. I’ll probably have to re-arrange again once we’re on the road. I mentioned in my last post that I realized I was missing a watch I had packed away. As I was arranging things in the basement, I opened each container so I was sure of what I placing where. I opened a long, shallow container and voila – there was my watch along with some other items I was also missing!

I rode the scooter over to Home Depot. I needed to buy another furniture blanket and some foam pipe insulation. When I walked into the store, the greeter girl asked if she could help me find anything. I told her I was looking for a furniture blanket. She said, “We don’t have those.” I asked her where the moving supplies, such as cardboard boxes were located. She said, “Aisle two, but I’ve never seen furniture blankets there.” I thanked her and walked to aisle two. Above the stack of cardboard, I found furniture blankets, just like at the Home Depot in San Diego.

I needed the furniture blanket to pack the two extra folding dining chairs. I didn’t want to ding the wood or wreck the upholstery. They were stored in our wardrobe, but we needed that space for Donna’s piano stand and chair and some other things. I also wanted foam pipe insulation to wrap the top foot or so of the extension ladder. I didn’t want to lay the metal ladder against the paint on the top cove of the motorhome when I use it to access the roof. I put the pipe insulation on the side rails of the ladder and held it in place with duct tape. This worked well.

While I was out, I stopped at Big Tex Trailer Sales on Main Street. I bought a wheel caster to use on the trailer. It fits on the foot of the front jack. It’s held in place with a pin, so it’s quick to install or remove. With it installed, I should be able to push the trailer by hand and place it where ever I want it. This will make “parking” the trailer a lot easier when we need we have a back-in rather than a pullthrough site.

Although the days are warm and sunny with temperatures in the low 70s, the nights are cool. Our coach is equipped with two – 15,000 BTU air conditioners which are also heat pumps. Heat pumps are a very efficient way to heat a space, as long as the outside air temperature isn’t too cold (they don’t work well below freezing temperature). We’ve been setting the heat pumps to 63 degrees at night. I think this is great! Our last coach didn’t have heat pumps. If we wanted heat, we had to plug in a space heater or turn on the propane gas furnace. The heat pumps on this coach don’t use propane, only a relatively small amount of electricity to transfer heat. If we were in an area where it’s really cold (below freezing), then I would have turn on the propane gas furnace.

Donna has been busy. She needs to get a manuscript in to her publisher today. I’ll change the motor oil and filter on the scooter and also change the gear oil. I’ll get a head start on organizing the trailer. I’m a little sore and tired from moving things around in the basement compartments yesterday.

Time and Space

Yesterday seemed like a busy day, but when I think about what I actually accomplished, I’m a little disappointed. My goal was to start packing things in the basement compartment. We have a large pass-through compartment and a smaller, narrow pass-through. The access doors are fairly tall and  large on the passenger side and shorter (due to the living room slide-out) on the driver’s side.

Trying to pack these spaces efficiently is a challenge. I’m trying to place things that are rarely used in the center. Things that are occasionally used can go on the driver’s side. Things that we frequently use should go on the passenger side where the access is easiest.

Passenger side basement access

Passenger side basement access

Driver's side basement access

Driver’s side basement access

I thought the smaller, narrow pass-through compartment would be good for ladders and the Weber grill. It turned out to be too narrow for the grill. The small 6′ step ladder barely fits. The Werner Mt-17 telescoping Multi-ladder* definitely won’t fit there. By the way, the Werner ladder was delivered yesterday replacing the original MT-13 that I ordered. The literature with the ladder explains the size discrepancy – you might recall me mentioning that the MT-13 is advertised as a 13′ extension ladder but it’s only 10′ long. The 13′ they refer to is how high the average person can reach when standing on the third rung down from the top. Likewise, the MT-17 is called a 17′ extension ladder, but is only 14′ long. I digress.

Narrow pass-through compartment

Narrow pass-through compartment

Packing our storage bins intelligently means I need to know what’s in the bins and how often Donna or I will need to retrieve something from it. The bins we bought before we hit the road were sized to fit in the storage bays of the Gulfstream. The Alpine Coach bays are much different. Some of our bins are long and not so tall, others are tall and rectangular. It’s a real puzzle that I’ll have to continue today.

Yesterday, I also treated the tires on our coach with Aerospace 303*. This is a UV blocker that you spray on and wipe off. It really protects rubber, plastic and fiberglass from damaging UV degradation. I want to protect the new tires on our coach and get the maximum life out of them before they dry out and develop sidewall cracks. To further protect them, I bought a set of tire covers. I’ll put them on anytime we’re likely to be stationary for a week or more.

Wheel Cover

Wheel cover

I also treated the headlight and tail light lens with Aerospace 303.

We’re having an issue with the electrically actuated toilet in the new coach. The seal on the toilet bowl leaks, so it doesn’t hold water in the bowl. The dealer that sold us the coach sent their guy, Tim, over to our site to see if he could fix it. He worked on it and it’s much better, but the bowl still slowly drains. Tim will try to source a new seal for it.

While I was going through things and trying to decide what goes where, I thought about an item I hadn’t seen. I asked Donna where the container with my watch box was. Neither of us had seen it since we left Michigan. One of items in the container is a Martin Braun Teutonia watch, one of 400 in existence and it’s fairly valuable. Donna thought I might have left it in the pass through compartment of our old coach. I was certain that I had taken everything out of the basement compartments.

We decided I should go back to the dealer and look in the basement of our old coach. I rode the scooter out to the lot where we left our coach in Apache Junction. The Gulfstream wasn’t there. I asked one of the guys where the coach was. He told me it was at a detail shop a few miles west of there. I rode west past Power Road and finally found the shop. The Gulfstream wasn’t there. I asked the guy who was cleaning a coach where the Gulfstream was. He barely spoke English and I don’t speak Spanish, but I understood that he didn’t know anything about a Gulfstream.

I was getting frustrated at this point. I tried to shrug it off. I headed home, but I made a stop at Lucky Lou’s on the way for a cold one. I saw my old friend, John Huff, there and sat with him. While I was sipping my beer, a thought occurred to me. I called our salesman, Brad, and asked if he knew where the Gulfstream was. He said, “It’s here at the lot in Mesa, I’m looking right at it.”

I told John I had to run and dashed out of Lucky Lou’s. The coach was on the lot as Brad said. I started opening basement compartments, looking for my watch box. The coach hadn’t been cleaned yet, so I doubt if anyone had taken anything from it. Unfortunately, I didn’t find the watch box, but I did find a long, narrow container with our dress shoes in a small pass-through space. Riding back home on the scooter with that container between my knees and up to my chin must have been a sight to see!

Last night, I grilled New York Strip Steaks and sweet potato fries. Donna baked tomato-zucchini parmesan to serve on the side. I should have taken a picture of the plate. As usual, it was a great meal.

NY strips and sweet potato fries on the grill

NY strips and sweet potato fries on the grill

This morning, Donna is saying that she clearly remembers packing the watch box in a long, shallow storage bin with a few other items. Today I’ll continue moving things into the basement and look in bins for the watch box as I pack.

 

*Just so you know, if you decide to purchase one of these through the Amazon link in this post, I’ll earn a small commission. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

 

 

Moving On Up

It has been a few days since I last posted. We were very busy preparing for and making the move to our new coach. On Friday, I moved most of the bulky items and bins from our basement to our cargo trailer. The trailer was packed tight! In the afternoon, I made the final walkthrough inspection and signed the paperwork. We bought our new rig! I had already set up an insurance binder – our policy premium went up $380, due to the higher value of our Alpine Coach over the Gulfstream Sun Voyager. Friday night was our last night in the Sun Voyager.

On Saturday morning, we prepared to drive the Sun Voyager out of the park. We did the usual preparations, except I left the sewer hose capped off and connected to the pipe in our site. I told our neighbor from Kansas, Tom, that I would leave my water and sewer hoses here while we picked up our new (to us) coach. With everything sealed up, it wasn’t an issue.

Tom and his wife arrived last week and will spend five weeks here. They just bought a 2004 42-foot tag axle Monaco Dynasty. It’s a real beauty with only 9,000 miles on it. The story behind that coach has a great moral. The original owner bought it in preparation for retirement and travel in 2004 and he built a garage to keep it in. He was in commercial real estate and at about the same time as he bought the coach, he bought a shopping mall and began renovation. The economy turned and he spent the next 10 years completing the renovation before he could sell the mall at a profit. He only used the coach a few times. Now that he’s finally retired, he decided he was too old to safely drive a 42-foot coach  and sold it. Moral of the story: don’t wait until it’s too late.

As we were pulling the slides in, Donna felt a little emotional about saying goodbye to our Sun Voyager. I was feeling excitement about moving into our new rig, not so emotional about leaving the old one. She was happy too, but said it was like finishing a good book – you feel kind of sad when it comes to an end. We drove to the dealer’s lot, pulled up next to the Alpine Coach and parked door-to-door with a runner rug between the two to facilitate the move. We started at the back of the Gulfstream, moving our clothes from the closet. For the next four and a half hours, we were in motion. I worked my way from the back of the coach through the bathroom and finally the living room. Donna sorted and roughly organized things as I dropped them off. She moved all of the pantry, refrigerator and freezer items. Our new refrigerator/freezer has about twice the capacity of our old one.

Parked door-to-door

Parked door-to-door

Around 3:15pm, it was time to light the fires on the Cummins ISL powerplant in the Alpine Coach. When I did the walkthrough on Friday, I brought a couple of the manuals home with me. I read them Friday night before we watched more Breaking Bad. The diesel engine and air ride suspension require time to warm up and pump up. There’s an idle speed control – after start-up at low idle (600 rpm), the oil pressure rises. Once oil pressure is achieved and the engine has been running for about 30 seconds, you need to raise the idle speed. The controller has an idle speed range of 600 rpm (low idle) to 800 rpm (high idle) and bumps up the idle speed in 25 rpm increments. I raised the idle to 700 rpm.

The hydraulically actuated slides on the Alpine Coach move very quickly in comparison to the Gulfstream. This makes it doubly important to be sure there are no obstructions. The slide operation has a few differences from our old coach. The ignition key needs to be in the accessory position or the engine needs to be running to operate the slides. Also, at least one jack has to be lowered before the slides will move. On our old coach, the engine would not start if the slides were out, or you could not open the slides if the engine was running.

I pulled the slides in while the engine warmed up and the air suspension came up to operating pressure. I walked around the coach and checked all of the compartment doors. When I was satisfied, it was time to move on out. I made a detour on our way back to the Sun Life RV Resort. I drove north on Ellsworth over Usery Pass. I wanted to climb the hill and feel the power! The Cummins ISL could accelerate at will anytime going up the hill. I held 50mph at half-throttle (I know, diesels aren’t throttled – it’s just a figure of speech).

Going down the other side of the pass to the Salt River, we held 45mph on the low Jake brake setting. I didn’t touch the brake pedal until we approached the stop sign at the bottom! I told Donna that I think it will be a lot less stressful and less fatiguing to drive this coach through the mountains. We turned west and climbed the hill up Power Road where we had power to spare all the way up.

Back at the RV park, I misjudged a couple of the turns and had to make them into two-point turns. The position of the driver’s seat has me sitting farther forward in this coach. I over-compensated a couple of times and started my turn-in too late. The extra three feet of wheel base compared to our old coach is noticeable. The Peak chassis has a 278″ wheelbase compared to 242″ on the Workhorse chassis we had before. Backing into our site was uneventful and fairly easy.

I hooked up the utilities, leveled the coach and put the slides out. I walked across the street and bought two gallons of drinking water and some beer. I didn’t want to use the water system in the coach for drinking, cooking or coffee until I sanitized the entire system. I think this was prudent – we didn’t know the source of the water in the coach or how long it’s been sitting in the system and it had a slightly sulfurous odor. At that point, I was done in. I opened a cold one and turned on the TV to watch football. We ordered a pizza from Fat Boy’s Pizza on the corner of Higley and University. I rate this as the best pizza I’ve ever had – tasty and the crust is just right. It’s not too thick and not too thin with a certain chewy-ness to it. Donna thinks it’s the best pizza she’s had outside of New York City.

Donna continued organizing the kitchen and bedroom until about 9pm. We sat through a couple more episodes of Breaking Bad before going to bed. I don’t think I mentioned before, but our coach was delivered with a brand new Simmons Beautyrest mattress. It’s a full-length queen size bed. Most motorhomes have short queen mattresses, 75″ instead of the full 80″ length. We like the full length. Our Gulfstrean had the short queen. Our new coach also came with a new Euro lounge chair and ottoman that I am really liking, and the induction cooktop is also brand new.

On Sunday, I woke up feeling a little sore from all of the activity the day before. I started the day by dumping the water from the fresh water tank. The tank on the Alpine Coach has a drain valve, much like the valves found on waste water tanks. This made it fast and easy to empty the tank. I sanitized the tank with bleach. The standard sanitizing solution for this job is 1/4 cup (2 oz) of bleach for 15 gallons of water. I connected a 50′ garden hose to the fill valve. I poured  two cups (16 oz) of bleach into the hose and connected the hose to the fresh water faucet and began filling. It took about 20 minutes to fill the tank. The literature I have for the coach has a discrepancy – one place states that the fresh water tank is 105 gallons, another says it’s 110 gallons. The bleach solution I added should be enough for 120 gallons.

Once the tank was full, I opened each faucet in the coach, one at a time, to run the chlorine bleach solution through all of the plumbing. I did this with the hot and cold water. An hour or so later I ran the hot water through the shower long enough to fill the hot water tank with the bleach solution. Then I watched football on TV. Three hours later, I drained the fresh water tank.

While 100+ gallons of water was draining beneath the coach, I went back to watching football. My neighbor, Tom, and his brother knocked on my door. He advised me in his Kansas drawl that I had a major leak coming from my new coach! I thanked him for telling me, then I told him what I was up to, sanitizing the system and all. He said, “Good idea. Smells kinda like a swimming pool over here.”

Unfortunately for me, the Chargers season came to a close with the loss at Denver. They had a great run at the end of the season. I can’t be sad. Things went better for new head coach, Mike McCoy, than expected. I think offensive coordinator, Ken Whisenhunt will become a head coach elsewhere next season, but the future looks bright for the San Diego Chargers.

Today, I’ll start organizing the basement and moving things out of the trailer.

 

 

Braking Good

Yesterday, I went back to the RV dealer to further inspect our new coach and check on the tire installation. I arrived just as the tire guys were beginning their work. They had a medium-duty box truck outfitted with a powerful compressor and large tire machine. Handling large commercial duty tires is hard work. The tires I ordered weigh 120 lbs (54kg) each, plus the weight of the wheel.

I looked at the tires they brought to make sure they were the tires I specified and also checked the date codes. Date codes are branded into all tires sold in the USA, indicating the calendar week and year the tire was made . This is a Department of Transportation (DOT) regulation. For RVs, it’s especially important to know when the tire was manufactured. Most RVs are only driven 4,000-5,000 miles per year. In our case we may put on 8,000 miles per year. RVs don’t drive enough miles to wear the tires out (large commercial truck tires can easily last 250,000 miles when used in the trucking industry). On RVs, the tires usually age to the point of no longer being safe. Over time, UV exposure, ozone and other factors cause the tire carcass to dry out and crack. If we drive 8,000 miles per year, in seven years we will have put 56,000 miles on our tires. They’ll still have plenty of tread, but seven years is a reasonable life span for tires that are well-maintained.

When I looked at the tires, they were 295/75R22.5 size Toyo M154 with load range “H” rating, just as I specified. Toyo is a Japanese tire company with a reputation for making excellent commercial tires. I wanted tires that were made no more than six months ago. Tires age in storage, especially if they are kept in an area with electric motors running (creating ozone) or exposed to sunlight. Most tire warehouses are aware of this and avoid exposure, but there’s no guarantee of that. The date code on the tire was 3713, indicating the tire was made calendar week 37 of 2013. That would mean the tire was made in September of 2013, four months ago.

I hung around while they removed the wheels and mounted the new tires. This gave me the opportunity to inspect all four brake calipers and discs, suspension components, hubs, shocks and whatnot.

The Peak chassis is equipped with four-wheel hydraulically actuated, ABS-controlled disc brakes. This is somewhat unusual – most large diesel motorhomes have air-actuated drum brakes. The air brakes are a carryover from the trucking industry. By using air instead of hydraulic fluid, semi-tractor/trailer rigs can quickly and easily disconnect and reconnect trailer brakes. Hydraulic actuation would complicate this task. Some RVers believe that air brakes are inherently superior since that’s what large trucks use. I’m not buying into that line of thinking. It’s a matter of convenience, not performance. If air-actuated drum brakes were somehow superior, we would see them in use on aircraft and Formula 1 race cars. Both of those high-tech, demanding applications use hydraulically actuated disc brakes.

I was happy to see the brakes were in excellent condition with plenty of friction material on the brakes pads. The huge, 15″ (380mm) ventilated discs looked good. The shocks didn’t show any signs of leakage. The front hubs were filled to the proper level with gear oil. The air ride suspension bags looked good with no signs of cracking. All of the brake lines and air hoses looked good. The trailing arms and suspension links looked fine. The more I inspect this rig, the more I’m impressed.

Massive left front brake assembly

Massive left front brake assembly

Left rear axle showing brake assembly, trailing arm, shock absorber and air ride suspension bag

Left rear axle showing brake assembly, trailing arm, shock absorber and air spring suspension bag

When I returned home, I found a large cardboard box at the door. FedEx had dropped off the Werner multi-ladder I ordered through Amazon.com. Turns out, I ordered the wrong ladder. The MT-13 isn’t a 13-foot extension ladder as claimed on the website. It’s only 10′ 4″. I went online and set up a return in exchange for a MT-17, which is a 14-foot extension ladder. Confusing nomenclature, right? The return process through Amazon’s website is easy though – they’ve already ordered a FedEx pickup. I just have to print the authorization they sent me and re-tape the box with the authorization inside. My new ladder should be here Monday. I changed the link in yesterday’s post to the proper item.

Last night, I e-mailed the information on the new motorhome to our insurance agent in South Dakota. She will set up a binder for full coverage effective today. I also contacted Terri Lund at Mydakotaaddress.com to start the title and registration process. It can be a little complicated to complete an out-of-state transfer, but Terri is a pro and makes it easy for us.

Donna is continuing to burn the candle at both ends. She has much work to accomplish to meet her deadlines. At the same time, she’s attending yoga sessions and working out in preparation for a duathlon in March. Last night we took a break and watched four episodes from season two of Breaking Bad. We’ll continue with season three tonight.

Today, I’ll move things from the basement of our coach into our cargo trailer so we won’t have to transfer them to the new coach when we pick it up. This afternoon, I’ll make the final walkthrough, which I expect to take close to three hours. Then I’ll hand over the check for payment. Barring any unforeseen problems, we’ll have our new coach tomorrow. Yippee!

Why RV Trading Up?

Yesterday, I rode over to the RV shop to check more items on the Alpine Coach we’re purchasing. This time I crawled into the main pass through basement storage bay. I examined wiring, plumbing and heater ducts. I was looking for abraded wires, corrosion, loose ducting or signs of leaks in the PEX tubing. It all looked good.

A few people have asked why we are replacing our coach when we’ve been on the road less than six months. Fair enough. When we bought our motorhome in December of 2012, we weren’t thinking of full-timing in it. We wanted to take some trips and see how we liked RVing. We’d never owned an RV before. A couple of months later, we started talking about the possibility of full-timing. And then we decided to go for it before we even took our first trip!

Although our Gulfstream Sun Voyager is a fine motorhome and well-equipped, it falls short of our ideal coach. When we crossed the Rocky Mountains in high ambient temperatures, the lack of power at high altitudes became apparent. On long descents, the engine braking effect of a gasoline engine is inadequate. You have to apply the brakes, taking care not to overheat them. This can make some long, steep descents stressful.

The big diesel engines used in motorhomes are equipped with engine braking devices. Diesel engines do not have a throttle, so when you’re coasting downhill, the engine becomes an air pump. Heavy vehicles (like a motorhome or large truck) maintain momentum downhill and will turn the crankshaft of the engine. On the upstroke of the piston, air is being compressed and resists the upward motion. However, once the piston reaches top dead center and starts to move downward, the compressed air, which has been heated by compression expands, pushing the piston downward and returning the energy expended on the upstroke. Because of this phenomenon, diesel engines are equipped with devices to add engine braking effect.

Some have an exhaust brake. This is basically a valve in the exhaust that blocks the flow of air through the engine. With the airflow restricted, pressure increases in the exhaust manifold, pushing back into the cylinder when the exhaust valve opens. These are effective, but there’s a better (albeit more expensive) system.

The compression release brake is often referred to as a Jake brake or Jacobs brake. Jacobs Engineering was the pioneer of this system. The Jake brake opens the exhaust valve on the down stroke of the piston. With the cycle interrupted by the open exhaust valve, you only have the compression resistance on the upstroke and no return of energy (or spring back) on the down stroke. These are very effective. Some diesels have a two-stage system, which varies the number of cylinders involved and allows even more speed control.

So, one of the criteria for our replacement coach was a turbocharged diesel, which is less affected by high-altitude operation, and an engine braking device, preferably a two-stage Jake brake.

The next issue was a dedicated workspace solution for Donna. Our current coach has a booth dinette which is perfectly comfortable for dining, but not so much for working. The table is the wrong height for typing on the keyboard, the seat cushion is uncomfortable when sitting for extended periods of time, there’s no leg room underneath the table to stretch and we’re always having to clear the table when it’s time to eat. We decided to only look at floorplans with free-standing tables and chairs. This narrowed the field of coaches we looked at.

These first two items were must-haves for us. Another must-have that we were a little more flexible with was tank capacity. Our current coach holds 50 gallons of fresh water and about 45 gallons of gray and 45 gallons of black waste water. This really limits the amount of time we can boondock without a sewer hook-up. If we were really careful, we might be able to stretch the gray water holding capacity to a week. Our new coach holds 105 gallons of fresh water, 100 gallons of gray and 89 gallons of black waste water. A couple of weeks of boondocking before we have to find a dump station should be no problem at all.

The last criteria we applied to our search was an inverter. When we bought our current coach, I looked at the IOTA converter thinking it was an inverter. The salesperson may have told me it was – I don’t remember now, but I’ve learned a lot since then. Here’s the difference – the converter takes 120 volt AC power and converts it to 12 volts DC. This allows operation of various 12-volt systems and battery charging while hooked up to shore power or running the generator. Without shore power or running the generator, you have 12 volts from the batteries, but you do not have 120 volt AC power.

An inverter provides the same battery charging capability of a converter when hooked up to shore power or running the generator. The difference is, the inverter can supply 120 volt AC power from the battery bank when you are not hooked up. This means you can run your coffeemaker, power your laptop or turn on the TV without shore power or running your generator. To me, this is essential while boondocking. Our new coach has a 2000-watt inverter which gives us up to 15 amps of current at any one time.

These were our main issues and why we decided to trade our current coach in.

One of the things our new coach doesn’t have is a built-in ladder for roof access. For some reason, Alpine Coaches did not come with ladders. (I don’t think Country Coach provided ladders either.) To me, roof access is essential. You need to be able to perform maintenance, such as cleaning air conditioner condensers, caulking seams or just cleaning the roof. I ordered a 14-foot Werner MT-17 300-Pound Duty Rating Telescoping Multi-Ladder from Amazon*. This is a telescoping multi-ladder that functions as a step ladder or an extension ladder. It folds to a compact 56.5x24x8 inches for storage. This should work fine for roof access.

The new tires didn’t arrive for the Alpine Coach yesterday. Today I’ll go back to the RV shop and check the tire date codes and installation.

 

*Just so you know, if you decide to purchase one of these through the Amazon link in this post, I’ll earn a small commission. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Western RV

Yesterday was fairly uneventful. Donna went out on her bicycle and rode about 15 miles. I hung around the coach and puttered around. In the late afternoon, I stopped at a pub called Red, White and Brew. When we lived here before, it was my favorite place for a cold one after work. When we rolled into town last Friday, after new home shopping, I stopped at the pub and ran into a couple of friends there.

Last Friday, I had a draft beer (local brew, 8th Street Ale) and chatted with the guys a bit. When I was getting ready to leave, one of my old friends, Mike Hall, said he’d put my beer on his tab. Yesterday, when I stopped by again, I didn’t see any of the old crew. I sat at the bar and ordered a Hop Knot IPA. Heidi, the bartender said, “Hey, you left without paying the other day.” Apparently Mike neglected to tell her that he was paying for my beer. We had a good laugh when I told her what happened. Heidi worked here back in 2009 when I was a regular customer and remembered me.

Later, Donna and I decided to head down to the RV Resort community center. They had a Sloppy Joe buffet set up. I fixed a plate with a Sloppy Joe, cole slaw and salad. Donna skipped the buns and cole slaw. The people serving were from North Dakota and Iowa and they called the Sloppy Joe “barbeque.” Neither one of us had ever heard it called that before. But it was really good!

Once they finished serving, they started karaoke. There were some talented singers there and some not so talented. We didn’t hear anyone that was really bad though. Most of the song selections were from a time before my generation. We hung around for about half an hour and heard seven or eight songs before we left.

I’ve had a few comments on the blog and on Facebook asking about our new coach. As I mentioned before, it’s an Alpine Coach made by Western Recreational Vehicles (WRV). WRV started building recreational vehicles in 1972. They made travel trailers and 5th wheel trailers under the Alpinelite brand.

In 1997, they designed and built the first Alpine Coach. They designed and built the Peak chassis, then built the coach. Their approach was to build a coach with handling characteristics similar to a European touring sedan. Of course, no 31,000 lb (14,060 kg) coach will handle like a touring sedan, but it made good advertising copy. In comparison with other heavy-duty class A motorhome chassis, the Peak chassis offered superb handling with a smooth, but taut ride. When I drove the Alpine, I was struck by how smooth it handled without feeling mushy or wallow-y.

WRV built simple floor plans with high-quality components. For the most part, they stayed away from glitz and gadgetry and concentrated on building solid, reliable coaches. Their production facility in  Yakima, Washington mostly built travel trailers and 5th wheel trailers. Their coach production consisted of only a couple of models in various lengths from 34′ to 40′. The coach production averaged about 10 units per month from 1997 to 2008. The Alpine Coach registry shows a total of approximately 1,400 coaches built.

The last Alpine Coach was built as a 2009 model. I don’t know the actual date of manufacture. Many RV manufacturers suffered during the financial crisis and some good coach builders went out of business. WRV was one of them – along with Country Coach, Travel Supreme, National RV and others. People weren’t buying luxury coaches and RV manufacturers saw their cash flow go negative while expensive inventory went unsold. WRV had plenty of parts in stock when they closed their doors. These parts were auctioned off and spare parts are still available. Aubrey RV in Union Gap, Washington bought most of the parts.

Spare parts aren’t really a big issue. Most of the items in a motorhome come from outside suppliers. Most of these suppliers are still in business. For our coach, Dometic supplied the refrigerator and A/C units, Suburban supplied the furnace, Onan supplied the generator, Splendide supplied the clothes washer/dryer. All of these companies are still doing business. On the chassis, wear items like brakes, shock absorbers, ball joints, steering gear and axles all came from suppliers that are still around. We have a Cummins ISL diesel engine and Allison six speed automatic transmission and of course both of these companies are still in business, too.

I’ve been asked to post more pictures of the coach. I have some photos that the dealer took. I’ll wait to shoot my own interior shots when we have the coach and Donna has a chance to do some decorating and you can see what our home really looks like. Here are a few exterior shots from the dealer.

Living room slide-out

Living room and bedroom slide-out

Generator slide-out, power awning and curbside bedroom slide-out

Generator slide-out, power awning and curbside bedroom slide-out

Onan 7.5kw diesel generator

Onan 7.5kw quiet diesel generator

Window awnings

Window awnings

Large, pass-through basement storage

Large, pass-through basement storage

Wet bay

Wet bay

Engine service bay - air filter access, water separator, dipsticks, etc

Engine service bay – air filter access, water separator, dipsticks, etc.

Back of the beast with hidden rear view camera

Back of the beast with hidden rear view camera

More to come. It looks like we’re on track to take delivery this weekend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Following the Beast

It’s chilly this morning! Outside temperature showing 38 degree fahrenheit (3 celsius) at 8am. This is the coldest temperature we’ve been in since leaving Michigan, but nothing compared to what our friends in the midwest are experiencing this week.

Yesterday, after her morning yoga class, Donna worked all day at her laptop. We’ve been connecting through our Verizon Jetpack. The Sun Life RV Resort has free wifi available, but the connection is spotty. It probably shouldn’t be a surprise, since they have 700 sites here. Their system is probably overloaded at times. Donna walked down to the resort computer room to try that out and also find a more comfortable place to work. She still had connectivity issues, so she came back to the coach. This is a busy week for her as she has multiple deadlines.

I took the scooter out to run a couple of errands. I started by going to the RV dealer and checking more of the mechanical operations on the coach. We have a tentative deal – I put down a $1,000 deposit for them to hold the coach while I check everything over. The deal is contingent upon everything working correctly at the time of delivery. We’re making a list of things that need attention.

After I looked things over again, the sales representative I’m working with wanted to move the coach to their workshop, several miles east of the sales location. He suggested I follow him on the scooter, so I would know where it is when it’s ready for me to do a final walkthrough inspection. I thought this was great idea. By following the coach down the road, I could also watch for excessive smoke or any signs of blowby from the engine.

He hooked up a small vehicle (I think it was a Geo Tracker) to the back of the coach. This would be his transportation back to the sales lot. We headed east on Main Street. After a couple of miles, the traffic thinned out. I was surprised at how quickly he got the coach up to 50mph when leaving stop lights. Of course, the coach is unloaded, but it was pulling a car behind. This thing is a beast! I’m happy to report that all looked good going down the road. No smoke or any other issues were visible.

Side radiator, 5" tail pipe

The beast – Side radiator, 5″ tail pipe

From there, I stopped at AutoZone to buy cleaner/wax to clean our cargo trailer. It’s a little dirty and I would like to have it looking good when we leave here. Our new coach will have a fresh wash and wax job.

The Sun Life RV Resort is a 55+ active senior community. We’ve never stayed at a place like this before. They have a variety of activities planned each day. Yesterday they had a “Country Jam Session” on the calendar. This sounded interesting, so I walked down to the ballroom to check it out. They had a bunch of musicians playing – about a dozen guitarists (both acoustic and electric), two bass players, a drummer and a steel guitarist. It’s an open session and anyone can join in. There was a sizable audience – I’d estimate 80 to 100 people, many of them dancing. They were playing old country and western standards. Various singers took the mic. They all seemed to know the songs and didn’t step on each other’s toes. They sounded good and it looked like everyone was having fun. I think at 57, I was the youngest guy there!

Last night, we watched the final two episodes of Hostages. The ending was a little strange. Was this a one-season series or will they try to come up with a new twist next season?

Donna has plenty of work to complete over the next few days. I’ll try to stay out of her way and keep myself busy. I’m hoping the work on the coach will be completed by the end of the week. If I can make the final inspection on Friday, we can transfer our belongings and take delivery on Saturday. That would be the ideal schedule. But there’s always next week.