italiavb-THOR
Advanced Member
Hi everyone. Just purchased a 2017 Miramar. So far so good.
SuperD,
I must respectfully disagree with you on the full side slides. They are causing a number of problems for various manufactures. If you think Thor has a better design and they don't have problems with the slides, you are sadly mistaken.
The three rail system still has problems. While we were at the factory to have problems fixed, which is another story, we met several owners who have ongoing and unsolved problems with full slides. If Thor is telling you they have the solution, I have some ocean front property in Nevada I will sell to you.
I have a Windsport 27K with the 15,000 BTU AC and find it works fine for us here in FL. There are different opinions of course! But I like this unit being a 30A supply which wouldn't be possible with two AC's.
We have the 29M with 2 ac units and the enclosed heated tanks. I would say that if you plan to camp anywhere hot (like Florida), you need both units.
Before buying our Windsport, we lived 10 months in a travel trailer (selling our house!) in Florida. The unit only had 1 ac and it cooled fine but the ceilings were much lower, way less windows, and it was 3 feet shorter than our Windsport.
I am just going by what the dealer told me. I can tell you this even if it could be done at the dealer I am sure it would be a lot more money than if it was built at the factory. In addition if it was possible I wouldn't trust the dealer cutting a hole in the roof of a new coach. BTW what dealer told you this? Just curious as I live in Florida also.
Kev
If it gets really hot in the sun, we pull the big slide in in the 31S. This really helps with one 15,000 btu A/C. The coach is quite usable with the big slide in. We have survived in Fort Worth in the full sun at 96 degrees with the interior at 77 degrees at 3pm.
Another option with the 30 amp coach is to replace the front A/C with a Coleman Mach 3PS. It only draws 11.2 amps. Add another Mach 3PS in the rear. The coach is already wired for a second fan in the roof vent and you can use those wires to pull the heavier 12 gauge wires down to the water heater. Use a junction box to join he water heater and A/C wires. Change the 15 amp circuit breaker to a slow-blow 15 amp circuit breaker. The 15 amp circuit breaker should be able to handle the 11 amp load. You just have to remember not to turn the rear A/C on and the electric portion of the water on at the same time. Total cost for parts would be about $1700 and less if you get a good price for your old A/C. This would also allow you to use both A/Cs off the generator. The separate 20 amp pedestal plug is a more elegant solution to the second A/C.