So, I currently have a conversion van that I've converted to a camper with the intent of full timing. It's great, but I find that because I'm basically stuck here due to my job currently, I haven't used it as fully as I intended. This means I'm stuck in one spot for long periods of time, and running electronics for the last half of the day since I work most nights remotely. Since my power needs are drastic, and now that its winter in the mid west, I find I only use the van when my shift starts and spend the rest of the time in my parents house to conserve my power for work.
I am at the point where I can afford the luxury of an RV and am considering upgrading to a BT Cruiser, or other class B/B+ with a rear entry floor plan. I feel like with the convenience of the larger generator, and the RVs house batteries in addition to my own solar system, I would have enough power to run virtually all of my systems all day and not have to worry as much about conserving energy. Simply put, it would be easier to full time in an RV in this part of the country year round, 24/7, which was my intent with the van.
But before I pull the trigger on this, there's some pretty serious issues that I need to consider and get figured out first:
1. Solar Panels:
Currently on the van, I have 2 340 watt kyocera panels mounted to a ladder rack over my high top, with a 224 amp hour battery bank (same battery system bob had in his van build series). This system serves me well, and as I've only had it for a year, I do not plan on replacing the panels. I also need/want to maintain a large system for the reasons mentioned above and am not willing to compromise on my solar system. The problem here is, these solar panels are very large, somewhere around 52 inches x 64 inches I believe. So large, that there is not enough real estate on the roof of a BT cruiser to accommodate both of them without some sort of modification. I am wondering if there is some sort of roof rack system for RVs that I could purchase that would extend above the roof mounted air conditioner and mount my solar panels up over top of everything on the roof. I am thinking maybe some sort of ladder rack designed for box trucks might work? I am not really interested in fabricating something myself, and know virtually nothing about drilling/mounting things to an RVs roof, so this may be a task I pay some shop to do. However, I have no idea what kind of shop would perform this task, or if any place like this even exists in my area. I have searched around to see if anyone else has done this, and the only things I saw were completely custom, home built racks, so I may be out of luck on this. Any suggestions?
2. Insurance:
As this will be my primary, daily driver, I am wondering how insurance works for these and what the costs are? Is "Full Time RV insurance" more expensive than regular insurance? Do I need to specifically get RV insurance, or could I simply insure the vehicle as a "Ford E450", etc? I dont plan on carrying anything irreplaceable with me, and since I'm not really on the road, I'd like to spend as little as possible in this area.
3. Maintenance:
In the event that I do get to travel around, where can you have your routine maintenance done on something like this? For things like oil changes and what not, can you take an RV like this to a regular place like jiffy lube or Valvoline to get oil changes and common maintenance, or do you have to find some sort of specialty shop? What about more serious mechanical maintenance like engine/transmission issues? I assume I could get this serviced anywhere since its built on a common van chassis, but I'd like to be sure.
Sorry for the long winded post, but I want to make sure all my ducks are in a row here before I make any serious decisions.
I am at the point where I can afford the luxury of an RV and am considering upgrading to a BT Cruiser, or other class B/B+ with a rear entry floor plan. I feel like with the convenience of the larger generator, and the RVs house batteries in addition to my own solar system, I would have enough power to run virtually all of my systems all day and not have to worry as much about conserving energy. Simply put, it would be easier to full time in an RV in this part of the country year round, 24/7, which was my intent with the van.
But before I pull the trigger on this, there's some pretty serious issues that I need to consider and get figured out first:
1. Solar Panels:
Currently on the van, I have 2 340 watt kyocera panels mounted to a ladder rack over my high top, with a 224 amp hour battery bank (same battery system bob had in his van build series). This system serves me well, and as I've only had it for a year, I do not plan on replacing the panels. I also need/want to maintain a large system for the reasons mentioned above and am not willing to compromise on my solar system. The problem here is, these solar panels are very large, somewhere around 52 inches x 64 inches I believe. So large, that there is not enough real estate on the roof of a BT cruiser to accommodate both of them without some sort of modification. I am wondering if there is some sort of roof rack system for RVs that I could purchase that would extend above the roof mounted air conditioner and mount my solar panels up over top of everything on the roof. I am thinking maybe some sort of ladder rack designed for box trucks might work? I am not really interested in fabricating something myself, and know virtually nothing about drilling/mounting things to an RVs roof, so this may be a task I pay some shop to do. However, I have no idea what kind of shop would perform this task, or if any place like this even exists in my area. I have searched around to see if anyone else has done this, and the only things I saw were completely custom, home built racks, so I may be out of luck on this. Any suggestions?
2. Insurance:
As this will be my primary, daily driver, I am wondering how insurance works for these and what the costs are? Is "Full Time RV insurance" more expensive than regular insurance? Do I need to specifically get RV insurance, or could I simply insure the vehicle as a "Ford E450", etc? I dont plan on carrying anything irreplaceable with me, and since I'm not really on the road, I'd like to spend as little as possible in this area.
3. Maintenance:
In the event that I do get to travel around, where can you have your routine maintenance done on something like this? For things like oil changes and what not, can you take an RV like this to a regular place like jiffy lube or Valvoline to get oil changes and common maintenance, or do you have to find some sort of specialty shop? What about more serious mechanical maintenance like engine/transmission issues? I assume I could get this serviced anywhere since its built on a common van chassis, but I'd like to be sure.
Sorry for the long winded post, but I want to make sure all my ducks are in a row here before I make any serious decisions.