I wish that camper makers would use the quilted fabric used for portable fish houses. The insulation would be great for any weather and help with condensation from breathing.
I don’t know if this would be possible but could you rig a removable skirt around the bottom of both bed pop outs to help block wind and cold from pulling any heat you generate when sleeping? You could get them in black so to absorb any heat from the sun throughout the day. I think they are also used to hide any of your outdoor items like bikes, chairs, grills etc. This just makes sense to me as I am a hammock camping and we need under quilts to help keep us warm because our backside of our bodies lose most of our body heat so having an under quilt helps to hold that body heat. Your beds on these pop ups also allow cold air blow right under your beds, robbing you of the heat.
Thanks and yes. The first night we went Ibwas lazy and didnt install the liners and the heater had to run most of the night. When i put the liners in the heater would cycle on and off to maintain temp rather than running constantly. Great question and thanks for watching.
Great info. I’ve done the reflectix also. I have a Solo Stove as well. I had a cable snap while putting my pop up down, so I also made some boards as a safely feature. I purchased some pop-up Gismos for both my bunks ends and that helps as well. I have a short video of my Jayco Pop- Up on my RU-vid channel. Feel free to check it out.
My 2003 starcraft has 2 long flat metal sleeves that snap over corner posts as a safety measure to prevent roof from falling down. I put them in opposite corners after the roof is lifted before I go in to setup bunkends. Is it hard to takedown with snow on the trailer in the cold and just wondering if the plastic windows would be brittle enough to crack or split in freezing temps?