Welcome to my J.A.M. (Just Ask Mike) Session, a weekly column where I answer your basic electrical questions. If you’re a newbie who’s never plugged in a shore power cord (or ask – what’s a shore power cord?), or wonder why your daughter’s hair dryer keeps tripping the circuit breaker, this column is for you. Send your questions to Mike Sokol at mike (at) noshockzone.org with the subject line – JAM.
Dear Readers,
I’ve had several postings this week over on my RVelectricity Facebook group about dogbone adapters. No, these are not the bones that you actually feed your dog. But you’ll see below that they sort of resemble the cartoon version of a big juicy bone any cartoon dog would love.
In the RV world these are AC power adapters that allow you to plug your 50-amp shore power RV into a 30- or 15-amp pedestal outlet. Or you can go the other way ’round and plug your 30-amp shore power RV into a 50-amp pedestal outlet.
Power to the people…
But I’ve noticed some confusion in the naming of these adapters. For example, about half of my readers would call this male 30-amp to female 50-amp adapter a 30- to 50-amp dogbone since it allows you to use a 30-amp pedestal to power a 50-amp RV. However, the other half of you will call it a 50- to 30-amp dogbone adapter since it allows you to plug a 50-amp RV into a 30-amp pedestal.
This isn’t just some argument about semantics and double spacing after the period at the end of a sentence. (Yes, our editor, Diane, and I discuss this all the time, and I throw in the occasional double space just to see if she’s paying attention. [He does, and then uses that as his excuse. 🙄 —Diane])
Who’s on first?
For example, take a look at this next dogbone adapter, which is the reverse of the previous one shown. Note that it’s a male 50-amp to female 30-amp adapter. So do we call this one a 50- to 30-amp dogbone because it lets you use a 50-amp outlet to power a 30-amp RV? Or do we call it a 30- to 50-amp dogbone since it lets you plug your 30-amp RV into a 50-amp outlet?
TNSTAAFL (There’s No Such Thing As A Free Lunch)
Now in neither of these cases do these dogbone adapters actually give your RV more amperage. That’s determined by both the circuit breaker capacity of the pedestal outlet, and well as the circuit breaker capacity of the RV’s load center. So a 30-amp RV plugged into a 50-amp outlet is limited to 30 amperes of current (or at least it should be) by its own inlet breaker. And a 50-amp RV plugged into a 30-amp pedestal with an adapter can only use 30 amperes of current because it’s limited by the pedestal’s outlet circuit breaker.
Let’s take a poll
This is so interesting (and confusing) that I’m going to take a poll to see what you call the dogbone pictured below. I’ll give you the results of the poll next week along with how I would name it. So please take this poll (seriously) as I’m trying to determine the best way to write about this simple (yet confusing) adapter.
OK, everyone. Remember that electricity is a useful and powerful force, so we all need to pay attention to safety precautions while using it.
Let’s play safe out there….
Mike Sokol is an electrical and professional sound expert with 50+ years in the industry. His excellent bookRV Electrical Safety is available at Amazon.com. For more info on Mike’s qualifications as an electrical expert, click here. Join Mike’s popular and informative Facebook group.
And you don’t want to miss Mike’s webcasts on his YouTube channel.
For information on how to support RVelectricity and No~Shock~Zone articles, seminars and videos, please click the I Like Mike Campaign
Learn about RV camping, RV travel, RV news and much more. This newsletter, now in its 20th year of continuous publication, is funded primarily through advertising and voluntary subscription contributions from our readers.
If you shop at Amazon, please visit through our affiliate site (we get a little commission that way – and you don’t pay any extra). Thank you!
Sunday, September 27, 2020 Non-Members (advertising supported) edition
[activecampaign form=38]
RV sales continue to soar
If you’re an RV dealer who can manage to keep new RVs in stock, then you are probably poppin’ the champagne cork every evening celebrating your good fortune — RVs are flying off the lot! The latest statistics are in and, once again, sales are sizzling hot (with no end in sight)! Read more.
The Airstream Nest failure: A closer look
The Airstream Nest stood out immediately from the rest of the Airstream RV lineup in that it was a fiberglass travel trailer. It was a risk for the company that made its name by creating beautiful, shiny aluminum RVs. In the end, the risk didn’t pay off, and Airstream has stopped making the small but expensive RV. Learn more.
In a déjà-vu moment, the federal government has again come down on an automaker for big-time cheating on emissions testing. Manufacturer Daimler AG and Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC (collectively “Daimler”) have signed off on a settlement to clear the air over exhaust emissions violations. These smell a lot like the Volkswagen cheat of a few years back. Daimler sold diesel-equipped rigs with software that would cheat on emissions tests. Learn more.
Would you pay $409 a night to stay overnight in an Airstream trailer?
A new campground is betting that at least some people will gladly plop down that much to stay in an Airstream. The location may help convince some folks that it’s worth it. But $409 for one night? Does that seem a bit steep to you? Read more and answer a quick question if you think you might want to stay.
Dream work camper job! Drive RV around the USA, drink beer and make $50,000 for 6 months’ work
Do you like beer? Would you mind driving around in a company-provided camper van, visiting national parks, doing a little hiking? Could you stand making $50,000 for six months of this kick-back work? Then Michelob wants you for an RV job. Their successful CEO, or Chief Exploration Officer, will get the money and the job. Read more, but act fast if interested. Deadline to apply is September 30.
Learn how to self-publish a book
Our friends Jim and Chris Guld, Geeks on Tour, will show you how to self-publish a book in a live webcast today (Sunday, Sept. 27) at 11 a.m. Pacific Time. You’ll “learn just how easy it is,” they say. Well-known RVer Nick Russell, the author of 42 books he self-published on Amazon, will join the conversation. Watch on YouTube live or in the archives later.
Feature Article
Free Guide to 2021 RVs
EDITOR’S UPDATE SUNDAY MORNING: We messed up when we said this was downloadable. It can only be read online now. We will talk to the publishers about turning it into a PDF so it can be downloaded. We apologize for our error.
Do we have a treat for you — a free copy of the 2021 RV Model Year Guide. If you’re in the market for a new RV or simply curious about the latest developments in recreational vehicles then this will provide good reading. The fact that it’s free, with no strings attached, makes it an especially outstanding (and rare) offer. Click here to learn more and begin reading this excellent resource.
QUICK POLL
Do you plan to watch Tuesday evening’s presidential debate?
Looking to buy a new car or pickup in 2035? If you’re in California, don’t hold your breath. California’s governor penned a proposed rule that would ban sales of new cars or trucks fueled with gasoline come 2035. Sales of used gassers would still be allowed under the rule. The governor says the rule would whack greenhouse gas emissions by 35%.
It’s a sure sign that RVs are gaining wide public recognition. Speaking of “2020 SW”, an asteroid scheduled to get very close to earth on Thursday, September 24, a scientific publication described the asteroid as “potentially RV-sized.” Since the asteroid was projected by the Center for Near Earth Object Studies to NOT smash into earth, we’ll safely assume you were able to read all about it in the Sunday newsletter. But on the other hand …
While RV manufacturers quaked when COVID-19 descended on the country earlier this year, fearing the worst, they’re rejoicing now. In 2019 the industry rolled 406,070 rigs from factories to dealers. A new forecast suggests despite a two-month shutdown, that number will grow to at least 414,400 in 2020. Next year, says the RV Industry Association in a press release, at least 494,400 units will ship out. The best-case-scenario shows more than 507,000 new RVs being demanded by dealers in 2021, and if that were to materialize, it would mean nearly 20% more than the wildest dreams for 2020 demand.
Joplin First News/Shannon Becker via Facebook
😱OH MY GOODNESS!
How often do RVers hear “Never overload your rig!” Just what is the towing capacity of a 3/4-ton Chevy Silverado? Something suggests that a 70’ single-wide mobile home may just be a tad over that limit. But leave it to some character in Sarcoxie, Missouri. Maybe this guy was looking to save a buck by not hiring the job out. In the dark of the night he set out from Kansas headed to Missouri, and did fairly well for a while. It was that narrow turn, coupled with a dip in the road, that ended the trip. It took a Rotator wrecker and more than two hours to clear the highway. Heavy wrecker – heavy fines: The driver is “on the hook” for many violations – not to mention a broken mobile home frame.
When Oregon RVers Joe and Lisa Waldner approached Red Cross volunteers in Salem, they had no idea how welcome their offer would be. The Waldners told the volunteers they had a travel trailer they’d be happy to lend out if someone needed it. Across the street in the Oregon State Fairgrounds lot, hanging out in their van, were Chuck and Lee Borgia. The Borgias had been run out of their home in Gates by wildfires. The couple both have health problems: Chuck’s heart requires he keep his feet up – hard to do sitting in a van. The Waldners not only loaned the Borgias their trailer, Joe went out and bought a generator to keep them “juiced up,” and comes by twice a day to fill up the tank and check on them.
AccuWeather/Bill Wadell via news.yahoo.com
A camp host in Florida now has bragging rights – or are they a claim to “not too smart” rights? When Hurricane Sally crept ashore on September 16, most all guests at the Playa Del Rio RV Park in Perdido Key, Florida, took shelter in the park’s restroom. Not so John Russ, the host. He sheltered in his motorhome, which, he claims, withstood the winds with only one tire slightly lifting off the ground. A number of rigs in the campground, including one parked directly behind his, were tossed over on their sides. Is Russ’ rig nicknamed, “Nine Lives”?
For Katherine Molohon, fighting wildfires is not new. She was on the line in Paradise California’s Camp Fire. But the front lines of the Butte County, California, Bear Fire were a bit too close to home. As fire roared through Berry Creek, firefighters were ordered into “evacuation mode,” where the job wasn’t to fight flames, but to try and get residents out of harm’s way. When it was over, Molohon learned the Bear Fire took her own home. But a retired firefighter from San Francisco, Barbara Schultheis, came to Katherine’s rescue. Last week, Schultheis drove eight hours to Oroville, California, to hand over a new temporary home, giving Katherine the travel trailer that Schultheis owned. Katherine hopes to move the trailer to her burned-over property very soon. A GoFundMe page has been set up to help Katherine get back on her feet.
Central Crossing Fire Protection District, Shell Knob, MO
Repeat after me: “I will faithfully and regularly check my RV propane detector!” Firefighters from Shell Knob, Missouri, would likely have you repeat this commitment after responding to a motorhome explosion last Sunday. On arrival they found a single occupant suffering first and second degree burns, after the person tried lighting the range – and met with a propane leak.
Dolores River Campground photo
Here’s an “If it’s too good to be true, it probably is” story with a happy ending. Last August, Jerod Saiz, a California RV dealer who specializes in classic rigs, got a phone call. The woman calling said she had a 1953 Airstream Flying Cloud she’d like to sell. Saiz made the trip to Cortez, Colorado, to check out the rig, and found it to be in remarkably good shape. The seller, Elizabeth Ann Rogers, explained she’d obtained the trailer from another woman as payment of a debt. Saiz agreed to pay a paltry $7,500 for the Airstream, but alas! Rogers couldn’t come up with the title – she’d send it soon. Soon Saiz had the bargain Airstream back in California. Three days later, Saiz was on the phone with Billy and Lainey Beyhan, who own an RV park in Cortez, Colorado. Seems that the day Rogers called the RV dealer, the Beyhans found that their most-prized vintage RV, which folks would rent to stay in on their grounds, had vanished. On finding the rig missing, the couple had posted information about the theft on social media, and Saiz, apparently a man with a conscience, spotted the posting and contacted the real owners. The Airstream is back home in Colorado, Saiz got part of his purchase price back from Rogers (plus a $1,000 reward from the Beyhans), and Rogers was put in jail last week on theft charges.
Do you “Like Ike”? The newest unit of the U.S. National Park Service isn’t a shady grove of trees, but is the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial, in Washington D.C. The memorial got the official notation on September 18, honoring the former president as, in the words of the Park Service, “a transformational leader, peacemaker, rebuilder, civil rights advocate and fiscal hawk who helped make our country a beacon of freedom and hope for the world.” The memorial is in a newly created, four-acre public park along Independence Avenue SW between 4th Street SW and 6th Street SW, across from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Find out more about the 420th national park unit here.
nystateparkstours.com
How would you look at a hundred years? If you’re one of the oldest campgrounds in the New York State Park system, you’d look pretty sharp. Appropriately, Sharp Bridge Campground, now at the century mark, is still a popular place to find some solitude. In 1920 there was but one site along the Schroon River. In less than a decade, there were 40 sites, but now a century down the road, the campground is much the same as it was. True, gone is the much-missed “well-built and well-maintained outhouse,” replaced with more modern amenities. And now your site is marked with a number, but ages ago, signs bearing the names of families who used them marked the spots. And because men must shave, there is power in the bathhouse. While popular among tenters, a state website says rigs up to 45’ will find a spot to stay.
There’s money to be made in every negative situation. An insurance company that caters to RV park owners is now offering what it describes as a first in the industry: A special policy endorsement “to cover violent events.” Great American Insurance Company’s offering protects park owners from trouble if an event involving deadly force causing bodily injury takes place on their property. The company is quick to point out that nobody has to be physically injured – say a shot fired goes wild and hits no one – trauma can still be a liability factor. Says the insurance outfit, “One thing is for sure – current stressors have maxed out the mental health of many people, leaving them vulnerable to lash out.” More peace of mind for difficult times.
krqe.com
When Marcos Vigil was born, there was a problem. His small intestine was outside his body. In most cases, it’s a quick “put it inside, and zip it up.” That’s what was done for him, but the procedure didn’t work. At 10 months, Marcos underwent a multi-organ transplant: a small intestine, liver and pancreas. Now 8 years old, Marcos has plenty of zip, but the New Mexico boy and has family have to make frequent trips to specialists in Nebraska. That means a tough road trip and stays in motel rooms. Marcos was well-known to an area Make-a-Wish group – they used him as a spokesman on video commercials. The set up? In a video, Marcos is asked what he’d like for a wish. “A camper,” so he could stay in his own place when seeing doctors. You guessed it. Marcos got his wish. His mom couldn’t hold back the tears, and Marcos confessed. He’d do some crying too – once he got home.
We reported last week on the tempest created inWaynesville, North Carolina, when someone anonymously stuffed mailboxes with a flyer, indicating an RV park was to be developed on a local golf course. It turned out the club owners were merely kicking the idea around, but that didn’t stop a huge wave of protest against the imagined RV park. The fallout was quick. Last Monday the local planning board scuttled any possible future RV parks by putting a ban on any new RV parks in town limits. The town board has the final say in the matter, on which it will presumably vote in the near future.
In chilling testimony before the Gilchrist County, Florida, commissioners, an opponent to a proposed RV park spilled her fears. As quoted in local media, Rachael Smith, who says she lives directly across the road from the site, told commissioners, “I view this development as a threat to the safety of my family,” said Smith. “I spoke about the traffic impact of 1,029 RV’s [sic] per day that are going to be added to our roadway directly across from our house. Directly on our roads outside our home. That’s 1,029 more chances for my family to be in a car accident with an RV.” Interestingly, the proposed RV park would have 347 sites. We’re not sure if the commission will “do the math” on all those additional RVs, but they’ll vote on it come October 5.
lavafamilycampground.com
Joel Kilpack had a dream. Not an ordinary one. Kilpack’s dream spurred him on to constructing the Lava Family Sanctuary, a spiritual retreat on 51 acres of land near Inkom, Idaho. The retreat included eight RV sites, room for 15 tents, and 12 tipis. Evidently Joel’s “dream directions” didn’t include bringing local authorities into the picture, until recently. After opening his retreat, Kilpack approached Bannock County about obtaining a conditional use permit – his sanctuary is located in a residential-rural zone. Local residents were not pleased, dubbing Kilpack’s place “Tipi Town,” and urging a thumbs-down. The planning board agreed, allowing Lava Family to operate through the summer, as Kilpack already had several reservations on his books. Come fall, the RVs must roll away, and the tipis must collapse.
Vehicles of the Imagination
From the mind of Steven M. Johnson
COPYRIGHT 2020 by Steven M. Johnson
Think you’ve got trouble at the DMV? An Oakland Hills, Florida, man trying to transfer ownership of a travel trailer didn’t just have trouble, he got arrested. Sylvester Alfonzo Ingram showed up at the tax collector’s office in Belleview to get a title and registration for a trailer he said he bought. Turned down at first because the paperwork was missing one of two required signatures, Ingram came back with both signatures. When staffers ran the records, they found the trailer was reported to be stolen. An obliging policeman came in to help out. Ingram told the officer he’d just bought the trailer, and provided the “seller’s” phone number – “Sorry, wrong number.” The officer than rang up the listed owner who made it clear the rig was indeed stolen and, no, he’d never signed off the title to sell it. Ingram is out on $2,500 bail, charged with uttering a forged certificate of title and fraud representation.
One big thing standing in the way of electric-powered RVs: Batteries. While lithium-ion cells are running lighter weight rigs in the real world, scaling up battery packs to handle the weight of an RV is another matter. And recharge times also play into the game. Lithium-ion batteries will hold a lot of energy for their size, but take a long time to charge. Two technology players think they have an answer: A hybrid battery pack made of lithium-ion batteries, supplemented with a graphene-based “ultracapacitor,” which stores electricity statically rather than chemically. An ultracapacitor can be charged in just seconds. Trouble is, it would take a huge amount of space to store the same amount of usable power that lithium-ion units provide. But Skeleton Technology of Estonia, and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, say their research combines the two technologies. Pundits suggest the promised “15-second recharge time” touted by the outfits means run down your lithium-ions and do a quick recharge to get you a short distance home. Time will tell the tale.
Watch out for this scam. An unknown person(s) is posting multiple RVs for sale on Facebook Marketplace. When an interested party contacts the seller, they are advised that the RV is in storage and packaged for delivery. The buyer is then directed to make payment through a third party, after which the RV will be delivered to them within five days. Once the payment is made, the seller can no longer be contacted and the RV is never delivered. Websites such as Craigslist are also rife with advertisements for low-price vehicles, with seemingly eager sellers often claiming that the reduced price is because of an upcoming military deployment overseas, a divorce, or the death of a family member who owned the RV. Victims are directed to pay a supposedly independent third party, typically by wire transfer, to hold money in escrow and ship the vehicle. Again, no vehicle is ever delivered. If you have been victimized by one of these RV scams or something similar, report the crime to your local law enforcement agency.
HAVE YOU SEEN THIS STOLEN RV?
Fort Vermilion, Alberta, Mounties are looking for help with a stolen travel trailer case. A 2019 model year Open Range Ultra Light was swiped straight from the owner’s driveway in Le Crete on September 11. The photo here is a stock image of the same make and model of the rig. At the time of the theft, the 24′ trailer bore an Alberta license plate, 5VD946. Phone the RCMP detachment at 780-927-3255 with information, or contact Crime Stoppers online at www.P3Tips.com.
Be like Mike, use silicone!
Mike Sokol says: Never use any kind of petroleum-based products on rubber or plastic components in your RV, such as your trailer connector. That includes products such as Vaseline, WD40 or any other spray lubricating oil. Doing so will break down the plastic or rubber components causing them to swell up and disintegrate. The proper treatment is anything silicone-based. We use Heavy Duty Silicone for general connector cleaning and lubrication. It’s also useful on rubberized door sweeps. You can get some of your own here.
Pickup truck news
According to our recent survey, about 80 percent of RVtravel.com readers own at least one pickup truck. Recognizing that, we’ll provide the latest news highlights about the vehicles here each week.
2021 Chevy Silverado: Increased towing for versatile new truck
The Chevy Silverado 1500, the country’s second-highest-selling light-duty full-size pickup truck, is known for its versatility. For 2021, the manufacturer has added a truckload of technology and mechanical updates. It’s now in production and will be available beginning throughout the fall in different sections of the country. Learn about all the new features here.
Say what? New Hummer EV pickup will include “Crab Mode”
The all-electric Hummer EV will be unveiled October 20 and will include another unique attribute for a vehicle well-known for its uniqueness – Crab Mode. The feature will allow the Hummer to move across terrain diagonally like a sand-dwelling crustacean. Crab Mode will be enabled by the electric pickup truck’s four-wheel steering capability. Its functionality is “tailor-made for off-roading customers,” the manufacturer said. Learn more.
Run your RV air conditioner with only a small portable generator. Yes, it’s true!
Reader poll
If you became suddenly filthy rich, would you buy a new high-end RV?
Who is your mother’s only sister’s son’s brother’s aunt’s daughter’s sister’s father?
(Answer below.)
Soap and water won’t work! Easily remove bugs, tar, sap and grease Tarminator Tar & Sap Remover breaks down the complex molecules found in tar and other sticky materials. The unique MicroActive cleaning technology gives Tarminator unequaled ability to remove even baked-on tar, grease, sap and asphalt. Soap and water just won’t do it! Learn more or order.
News briefs
In a record-breaking deal that closed on Sept. 22, the Superstition Sunrise RV Resort in Apache Junction with 1,119 sites sold for $88 million, according to the Phoenix Business Journal. It was the largest single transaction from a dollar standpoint in Arizona for a mobile home or RV resort.
Multiple RVs stored at Storage ‘R’ Us in Lawton, Oklahoma were broken into on Friday. In at least one case the burglars didn’t pick locks or break windows to get in; they dropped in through a 14 inch by 14 inch roof vent. “Besides destroying the roof vent they took cushion covers from my couch. . .” said customer James Howell. “They stole a coffee pot, an air mattress that goes to that couch. . . and inside my storage area they took an ax.” He said the thieves copped several TV sets from another RV. The crooks are still on the loose.
A former oil and gas well pad has been converted into a free campground for visitors to Carlsbad Caverns National Park and Guadalupe Mountains National Park. The land was previously permitted as a well site for oil and gas extraction. The 4-acre site is off National Parks Highway between Carlsbad Caverns and Guadalupe Mountains national parks. It offers five RV spaces and six tent sites on a first-come, first-served basis.
👍 Broadmoor RV of Pasco, Wash., presented the Special Olympics of Washington state an $85,000 check Wednesday afternoon to support the virtual fall games. This is the second year that Broadmoor RV has sponsored the fall games. “We’re doing it just to see the smiles on their faces. It’s just amazing for these kids,” said John Ramsey, owner of the dealership.
Campground and RV park News
Keep up with what’s going on where you stay with your RV
Janet Groene reports each week on developments at RV parks and campgrounds across the USA and Canada. There’s a lot of good information here that you can use to plan your travels. Read the current installment of “Campground Chatter” here.
Here are the latest U.S. average prices per gallon of gasoline and diesel fuel as of September 21, 2020: Regular unleaded gasoline: $2.17 [Calif.: $3.09]
Change from week before: Down 1 cent; Change from year before: Down 49 cents. Diesel: $2.40 [Calif.: $3.26]
Change from week before: Down 2 cents; Change from year before: Down 68 cents.
Sign up for an email reminder for our weekday RV Daily Tips Newsletter, published every Monday through Friday. You won’t want to miss it!
RV Advice, 24/7. Join our group at Facebook, RV Advice. Connect with other RVers. Ask questions. Share information. The group is moderated by the editors of RVtravel.com.
Upcoming RV shows
Most if not all RV shows for the remainder of the year are cancelled. We will restart this feature as RV shows begin again.
Affordable tire tool will save you tons of trouble
What gives when you think your tires are “good to go” but down on air again the next day? Your valve stem valve probably isn’t tight enough. A loose, leaking valve stem can cause a tire failure due to low pressure under load at highway speeds. So do yourself and your vehicles a favor – pick up one of these very inexpensive tools and make sure your valve cores are snugly seated in the valve stem. Click here to order.
Free and bargain camping
From OvernightRVparking.com
Click here to view this week’s free and bargain camping spots.
Brain teaser answer:
Your father.
Sunday funny
We featured this hilarious video a couple of years ago but couldn’t help sharing it again. If you’ve never seen this video (or even if you have), prepare to smile.
The funniest sign for your RV (and a best-seller with RVtravel.com readers!).Click here to laugh.
50 States, 5,000 Ideas, the best book for travelers!
This book from the experts at National Geographic showcases the best travel experiences in every state, from the obvious to the unexpected. Sites include national parks, beaches, hotels, battlefields, dude ranches, museums and more. Each entry provides detailed travel information and fascinating facts about each state that will help fuel your wanderlust and ensure the best vacation possible. The book also includes a section on the Canadian provinces and territories. Learn more or order.
Help wanted RVtravel.com needs editors, writers (some paid positions, others volunteer) and moderators of our Facebook groups. We also need RV industry insiders to provide us with information about the inner workings of the RV industry — the good, the bad, the ugly — so we can serve our readers with the best information possible. Learn more.
RV Travel staff
Editor and Publisher: Chuck Woodbury.Managing editor: Diane McGovern. Senior editors: Emily Woodbury, Russ and Tiña De Maris.
This website utilizes some advertising services. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Regardless of this potential revenue, unless stated otherwise, we only recommend products or services we believe provide value to our readers.
Everything in this newsletter is true to the best of our knowledge. But we occasionally get something wrong. We’re just human! So don’t go spending $10,000 on something we said was good simply because we said so, or fixing something according to what we suggested (check with your own technician first). Maybe we made a mistake. Tips and/or comments in this newsletter are those of the authors and may not reflect the views of RVtravel.com or this newsletter.
Every year about this time, the RV Industry hosts an open house in Elkhart, Indiana, the RV Capital of the World. About 85% of all American RVs are made in the area.
RV dealers from around the country attend the event to check out all the new model RVs and to place orders with manufacturers. But because of the pandemic this year’s event was cancelled.
The editors of RV Business Magazine (and website) jumped into action by creating a 2021 RV Model Year Guide, which it hoped would help dealers – as well as consumers – learn what was available in the newest RV models rolling off the assembly lines. The result is a 142-page reference that details hundreds of RV makes and models. Photos and floor plan illustrations are included.
“It’s an approach – reaching out to the wider industry as well as consumers with an array of new RV model year debuts – that we never would have thought of if we hadn’t been faced with a colossal obstacle like COVID-19 and if a number of front line trade groups, consumer clubs and website operators hadn’t helped us out by posting or digitally circulating the Guide section,” said RVB Publisher Sherm Goldenberg.
The publication is free, with no strings attached. No registration is required. Simply click the link below which will take you to a Flipbook version of the guide.
UPDATE: In an earlier version of this article, we reported that this was a PDF book that could be downloaded. That was a mistake. It can only be read online at this time.
The latest news about camping and developments in North American campgrounds and RV parks from Janet Groene.
DISCLAIMER: This blog covers timely news for RV travelers. Information is believed current at press time but conditions are still changing quickly. Check ahead directly with the campground. Don’t rely on websites or Facebook. Full facilities and activities may not be open. Get specifics about rates, campground facilities, reservation policies, campsite specifications and the condition of access roads. No endorsement of any campground or product is implied by this reporter nor this website.
FULL ALERT: Schedules of openings, partial openings, re-closings and cancellations are still in flux and are fixed by state, county and city authorities. They may apply differently to private and public campgrounds and to residents versus non-residents of that state or county. Check ahead.
DATELINE:September 26, 2020
ALBERTA CAMPGROUND EXPANDS
In Cold Lake, the Municipal District Cold Lake Campground will reopen in future years with more and better everything. The 67 acres are buzzing with projects to be completed over the next three years. They include a boat launch, a marina for boats up to 25 feet long, improved roads, new RV campsites, a new water main, handicap campsites, drainage improvements and developed tent sites. 1-780-639-4121
ARKANSAS STATE PARK CELEBRATES SHADY PAST
Hook up with water and 50-amp power by reservation at Jacksonport State Park and travel back in time to discover the dark history of this once-raucous river town. A special exhibit now at the 1872 Courthouse Museum is titled “Con Men, Gamblers, and Thieves: The Crimes of Jackson County.” Costumed interpreters lead scheduled tours, which meet at the Visitor Center. 870-523-2143
BRITISH COLUMBIA LOSES POPULAR CAMPGROUND
There will be one less private campground near Okanagan Lake. Current plans in Kelowna call for Willow Creek Family Campground to be replaced with a massive tower complex of 322 housing units, a three-story parking facility and 20,000 square feet of commercial and retail space. Nearby Hiawatha RV Park and its campground are slated for redevelopment.
FLORIDA NATURE RESERVE TO OFFER CITY CAMPING
Located in St. Petersburg in a setting of 245 acres of pine flatwoods, sandy scrub, hammock, a lake, marsh and swamp, Boyd Hill Nature Preserve will include a campground, a new educational building, and a welcome center with meeting rooms. The first phase of the expansion will be 12 primitive campsites, then group sites and six cabins. A Pioneer Settlement will feature Florida cracker buildings and re-enactments of pioneer life.
FLORIDA PARK HOSTS WILDLIFE EXPERT
Camp at Collier-Seminole State Park, Naples, on November 3 to enjoy an hour-long talk by wildlife expert and park volunteer Paul Allen. He’ll talk about the rich population of creatures that live in the Everglades in and surrounding this park. The campground offers water and electric hookups, a dump station, grills, picnic tables, a laundry and restrooms. Nature talks, which are held often in this park, take place in the campground’s screened enclosure and on nature paths. Phone: (239) 394-3397 for information and make site reservations at ReserveAmerica, (800) 326-3521.
GEORGIA STATE PARK GOES TO THE DOGS
Bring the dog (and its leash and vaccination tags) to join the fun at Laura S. Walker State Park, Waycross, on October 10, when the Bark in The Park and Pet Costume Contest includes hikes for dogs and their people on the Big Creek Nature Trail. The park, which is near the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, has 44 site-specific campsites. Reserve early. (912) 287-4900.
MINNESOTA WELCOMES NEW CAMPGROUND
Hardy’s Lake in the Woods RV Resort, Motley, celebrated its Grand Opening on September 26 with barbecue and tours of a 112-acre park that will offer 160 campsites, each 50 feet wide. The Hardy family, which operates of the Fish Trap Camping and RV Resort nearby, will offer full hook-ups, seasonal rentals, swimming pool, bathhouses, hiking and biking paths, paddlesports and fishing in Lena Lake or nearby Lake Shamineau. The resort will be open May 1 through September 30. For 2021 reservations call (218) 232-6472 or (218) 541-0130.
MISSOURI STATE PARK EXPANDS MARINA
Eight new covered boat slips have been added at Long Branch State Park, Macon, where focus is on boating, a marina and marina store, fishing, paddling and watersports on Long Branch Reservoir. The 1,828-acre park offers campsites with electric and site-specific reservations. (660) 773-5229
NEBRASKA CAMPGROUND HAS NEW LOOK
New owners of High Point RV Park, Kimball, took the reins at the long-vacant, 32-site campground earlier this year and gave it a complete make-over with new wiring, plumbing and water systems. The new look includes updating, a laundry, showers, bathrooms and new paint as well as 15 modern new campsites. All sites now have full hookups and are pull-through. Some sites have heated water lines for winter camping. (308) 230-2003.
VIRGINIA CAMPGROUND SET TO REOPEN SOON
The Bark Camp Recreation Area campground near Coeburn, closed for two years due to a water system failure, is on its way to reopening when replacement of the full water system is complete.
Stay Tuned
The initial phase of a 26-site RV park has been approved for the West Bay Acadia RV Campground in Gouldsboro, Maine. Reportedly, six sites are already in place. Features of the 33-acre project will include high-speed internet and views of West Bay.
Janet Groene is the author of more than 25 books including Living Aboard Your RV, 4th Edition, available at Amazon.com. Her new Farley Halladay book, “May Misfire,a Yacht Yenta Mystery,” is available at Amazon.com. See Janet Groene’s weekly Solo Woman posts at SoloWomanRV.
Please send us your campground news. Just fill out the form.
By Keith Ward The Airstream Nest stood out immediately from the rest of the Airstream RV lineup in that it was a fiberglass travel trailer. It was a risk for the company that made its name by creating beautiful, shiny aluminum RVs. In the end, the risk didn’t pay off, and Airstream has stopped making the Nest.
Airstream hasn’t publicly stated why it halted production, and declined to answer questions from RV Travel about the decision to kill off the line. But the Nest is merely the latest attempt by Airstream to gain a solid foothold into the fiberglass RV market.
Airstream Nest: A brief history
Airstream has been open about this desire: “… [F]or years, we’ve had our eye on small, fiberglass travel trailers,” the company said in a blog entry from 2017. But it apparently didn’t want to build one from scratch.
Instead, it bought out the NEST Caravan company in 2016, and released the first Nest models in 2018. That means Airstream bailed on the Nest fewer than three years into its production run.
NEST Caravan was created and developed by Bend, Ore.-based Robert Johans. He began “The Egg Plant,” a fiberglass restoration business, in 2006. Over the years Johans worked on various fiberglass RVs, and eventually decided to use the knowledge gained to build his own travel trailer.
According to Airstream, Johans was brought into the company with the purchase of his business, and was the Nest project manager. At the time of its introduction, Airstream CEO Bob Wheeler said that “Nest is a product that conveys sophistication, simplicity, and upscale modernity, so it made sense for us to partner and help bring this design to market.”
The Nest was offered with a base price of $45,900, a hefty sum for a 16-foot RV. Airstream declined to provide sales figures for the Nest, but it also offers three aluminum travel trailers in the same rough size as the Nest, with price points both above and below the Nest’s base price.
It’s not known when Airstream decided to stop Nest production, but it’s worth noting that as recently as Feb. 14, 2020, the company was still promoting the Nest as a part of its lineup (see screenshot below). In terms of timing, the coronavirus pandemic began to hit the world at about the same time, but it’s unclear if the two things are related. Contrary to predictions, however, RV sales took off rather than contracted, as people saw them as a safer alternative to air travel and hotels.
If at first you don’t succeed…
Although the Nest isn’t Airstream’s first try at penetrating the fiberglass RV market, it’s had the most success. This article from the Airstream website provides a thorough history, discussing how founder Wally Byam was experimenting with fiberglass as an alternative material to aluminum in the 1950s. An Airstream ad of unknown date that appears with the article touts a fiberglass model as “The World’s First Plastic Trailer.”
The article describes multiple attempts by Airstream to restart the idea of a fiberglass RV. So it’s clear that Airstream sees the value in “plastic” travel trailers, but it has yet to hit on the idea that can make it in the market for more than a couple of years.
Will there be more fiberglass in Airstream’s future? Only time will tell.
A new campground on Cape Cod will rent you an Airstream trailer for $409 for a one-night stay. That’s the July and August rate. It’s a lot less if you want to stay when the weather isn’t as predictably nice.
AutoCamp, which has locations in Yosemite and the Sonoma Valley of California, will open in Falmouth, Mass., March 1, 2021, on a 14-acre site and will feature 108 Airstream trailers, luxury tents and tiny homes. There will also be many fire pits and a two-story clubhouse.
Prices for a night in a standard Airstream in March begin at $129 and will rise through the spring and summer. Prices get as high as $409 a night in July and August. Tents will be available April through October, and prices start at $159 a night. The tiny homes (called Vista X Suites) start at $279 a night.
On its website, the company says, “To put it simply, we believe that great design has the power to change the world, and that smart planning and small space design can help us reduce our environmental footprint. We invite you to come experience the simplicity of small space design at AutoCamp.”
Okay, sounds good. But are you willing to pay $409 to stay where “great design has the power to change the world?”
There seems to be no end to American’s new appetite for RV travel. RVs are flying off RV dealers’ sales lots faster than they can replace them. Until just recently, most of the sales were to first-time buyers, with no trade-ins. Dealers report that is changing slightly as some older RVers “age out” of the market.
The RV Industry Association’s August 2020 survey of manufacturers found that total RV shipments ended the month with 39,489 units, an increase of 17.3% from the 33,674 units shipped in August 2019.
Towable RVs, led by conventional travel trailers, totaled 35,561 units for the month, an increase of 20.8% compared to last August’s total of 29,448 units. Motorhomes finished the month with 3,928 units, down (-7.1%) compared to the August 2019 total of 4,226 units.
For the year, shipments stand at 258,591 units, off just 7.1% as the RV industry continues to overcome the nearly two-month shutdown this spring due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
SEE AUGUST SALES CHART BELOW.
NO SLOWDOWN IN SIGHT
RV shipments are expected to surpass 400,000 wholesale units by the end of 2020 and see continued growth in 2021 to more than 500,000 units, according to the Fall 2020 RV RoadSigns prepared by ITR Economics for the RV Industry Association.
The new projection sees total shipments ranging between 414,200 and 434,500 units with the most likely 2020 year-end total being 424,400 units. That total would represent a 4.5 percent gain over the 406,070 units shipped in 2019, overcoming a nearly two-month RV industry shutdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Initial estimates for 2021 have a range of 494,400 to 519,900 units with a most likely outcome of 507,200 units, a 19.5 percent increase over 2020.
The 507,200 units projected for 2021 would represent the best annual total on measurable record for the RV industry, eclipsing the 504,600 units shipped in 2017. The projected 424,400 units in 2020 would be the fourth best annual total on record.
Towable RV shipments are anticipated to reach 383,900 units in 2020 and 452,500 units in 2021. Motorhome shipments are projected to finish at 40,500 units in 2020 and 54,700 units in 2021.
“The RV industry has experienced strong consumer growth over the past 10 years, but the recent soar in consumer interest in RVing driven by the COVID-19 pandemic has led to a marked increase in RV shipments to meet the incredibly strong order activity at the retail level,” said RV Industry Association President Craig Kirby. “This new forecast confirms what we have been seeing across the country as people turn to RVs as a way to have the freedom to travel and experience an active outdoor lifestyle while also controlling their environment.”
The first presidential debate is coming up Tuesday evening, Sept. 29. Do you plan to watch? Please take a moment to answer our survey. The debates, most would agree, are a great opportunity to hear both candidates discuss issues important to all of us.
Because we are absolutely certain that an conversation about this will get nasty and out of control because of the hotheads in the crowd, we are not allowing comments.
But we would appreciate you participating in the survey itself.
Poll now closed. Result below are based on 3,713 responses.
Okay, let’s say you played a dollar ticket on the lottery. Instead of blowing a dollar like usually happens, this time you win a few million dollars! Wow, lucky you!
So what will you do with all that money? There will be a lot of options, including giving some of it to people who are your new best friends, and maybe a relative who suddenly likes you again (interesting how money can have such an effect).
But let’s say that no matter what happens, you end up with a giant wad of cash to spend any way you want.
Would you use it to buy a really fancy RV, one that was previously way out of your price range? Just think about the luxury! Maybe get one with two bathrooms and heated floors and a wine cooler, not to mention a giant residential fridge, washer-dryer and maybe even a spare bedroom for the kids or grandkids once COVID is history.
Is that what you would do? Or would you be happy with your present rig?
Remember, it can sometimes take a few moments for the poll to load, so stand by. The wait will be worth it!
By James Raia
The Chevy Silverado 1500, the country’s second-highest-selling light-duty full-size pickup truck, is known for its versatility. For 2021, the manufacturer has added a truckload of technology and mechanical updates.
It’s now in production and will be available beginning throughout the fall in different sections of the country. The 2021 Chevy Silverado will be highlighted by a new Multi-Flex tailgate.
The 2021 Chevy Silverado will have increased towing capacity.
The new tailgate has six unique functions, allowing for easier access to bed cargo, enhanced loading solutions and a standing workstation. With a weight capacity of 375 pounds, different configurations are used to activate it: either a key fob or two tailgate-mounted buttons.
Chevy Silverado: New towing ratings
Combined with the Silverado’s expansive cargo space, LED lighting, a 120-volt outlet and 12 fixed tie-downs, the new truck is the most functional and capable Silverado.
The Multi-Flex tailgate will be available in early 2021 on all new Silverado 1500 models.
The 2021 Crew Cab Short Box model increases its rating by 2,500 pounds to a max capacity of 9,300 pounds in two-wheel drive.
A newly available Regular Cab Long Box model provides the maximum 2.7L tow rating of 9,600 pounds and ups Silverado’s overall max payload to 2,280 pounds in 2WD.
The 3.0L Duramax turbo-diesel adds 1,900 pounds of trailering capacity to nearly every configuration and provides the maximum capacity of 9,500 pounds to 2WD models.
The 3.0L Duramax engine also receives a $1,500 MSRP price reduction for 2021 models, and customers benefit from both increased towing capacity and industry-leading EPA-estimated fuel economy of 33 mpg highway in 2WD.
Several camera view upgrades will also be featured:
Trailer Length Indicator: When making a lane-change maneuver with the turn signal activated, a red overlay twice the length of the compatible trailer is shown on the center console screen, which can help show when other vehicles are present.
Jack-Knife Alert: Tracks the position of the compatible trailer in relation to the vehicle and provides an alert if a potential jack-knife situation is imminent.
Cargo Bed View enhancement: Cargo Bed Zoom View and Bed Hitch Guidance are now available, which help to align and hook up a gooseneck/fifth-wheel trailer.
James Raia, a syndicated columnist in Sacramento, California, publishes a free weekly automotive podcast and electronic newsletter. Sign-ups are available on his website, www.theweeklydriver.com. He can be reached via email: james@jamesraia.com.
Thor Motor Coach (TMC) is recalling more than 1,600 model year 2018-2021 Aria, Palazzo, Tuscany, and Venetian motorhomes built on a Daimler Trucks (DTNA) chassis. The tire valve stem extension for the inner wheel may contact the outer wheel rim opening and become damaged.
Extensive damage to the valve stem extension may result in a loss of tire pressure of the inner wheel, increasing the risk of a crash.
Remedy
TMC will notify owners, and DTNA dealers will make the necessary repairs. The remedy is still under development. The recall is expected to begin November 15, 2020. Owners may contact TMC customer service at 1-800-524-5210 extension 104, or DTNA customer service at 1-800-547-0712. TMC’s number for this recall is RC000204. DTNA’s number for this recall is FL-861. Owners may also contact the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Vehicle Safety Hotline at 1-888-327-4236 (TTY 1-800-424-9153).
* * *
While you may not own one of these RVs, if you know someone who does be sure to tell them. RVtravel.com posts recall notices like this as they are issued. Read all recent ones by clicking here.
Not signed up for the free RVtravel.com weekend newsletters? Published online since 2001.Sign up here.
Free and inexpensive places to stay with your RV in the U.S. and Canada!
Updated weekly
When it comes to free places to stay a night in an RV, Walmart is the best bet. We estimate that about 60 percent of all its stores in the USA allow stays in self-contained RVs.
Other businesses that allow free overnight stays include Flying J Travel Centers, Cabela’s, Cracker Barrel restaurants (official policy is overnight stays are NOT permitted although most stores allow the practice), Costco and Kmart. Many RVers routinely stay in shopping center or factory outlet parking lots. Many casinos allow or even encourage overnight stays in RVs.
Recent reports of free and inexpensive places to stay with an RV:
From OvernightRVParking.com
Dairy Queen, Boise City, OK FREE! Overnight parking is allowed. Obtain permission from the staff on duty. Park in the separate lot behind fence at the back of the main lot. Appears level but unlit. Wi-Fi in DQ; RVer reports good 4G cell signal. Click here for details.
Academy Sports and Outdoors, Valdosta, GA FREE! Overnight parking is allowed but please obtain permission from store management. The store may grant permission for two nights. Park in separate lot on south side of building, without obstructing traffic lanes. Level, well-lit and appears safe, with only light traffic noise in this side lot. Walmart and Sam’s club just to the S, across Norman Dr. 6 – 8 restaurants between. Click here for details.
Overnight RV Parking, with more than 14,000 locations listed, is the largest and best resource for locating free and inexpensive places to spend a night in an RV. For membership information and a demo of the site, click here. A modest membership fee required, but try the free demo. Watch a video about OvernightRVparking.com.
Two excellent guides to free campgrounds
Roundabout Publications has teamed up with the Ultimate Public Campground Project on these two new guides. Discover thousands of designated camping areas in the West and in America’s Heartland – real places – not big box store parking lots. Included are areas managed by various governmental agencies. Learn more about the West edition or Heartland edition.
Here’s a free parking location from Facebook user Gary Yadon on our Free Campgrounds group: Gary writes, “Thedford, NE city park thirty amp elect. Donations.”
Facebook user Carol Kellogg on our new Facebook group, Outstanding but affordable RV parks, writes: “Twin Oaks RV Park in Elko, GA is a favorite of ours. Friendly owners, clean park with a happy vibe. Many shade sites, clean restrooms, nice saltwater pool. Good Sam & extended stay discounts.”
See last week’s free (or almost free) locations here.
Resources • Walmart Directory: Best printed directory of Walmart locations • Overnight RV Parking: More than 14,000 location listings. Inexpensive membership required.
• Harvest Hosts: Members can stay free overnight at farms & wineries.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. By continuing to use our site, you consent to accepting cookies. We NEVER have or will sell reader's data. For more info, please see our privacy policy page.