captainkf
Senior Member
Hello All! I was looking at pictures of very high end A class coaches last night and came across a unit that had under floor ducting for heat and AC. The AC units were located in the basement and looked to be like the units people use in there houses.
I have been considering an alternative to a ceiling mount since I purchased my bus. I am 6' 2" and once I have footwear the ceiling is awfully low. So adding more things to hang below it or protrude is NOT what I am after. The concern is buying a machine that does not hang down too far. But I already have a container that hangs down 21" for my propane tank that runs the appliances. Also the generator, which will/would be housed in a compartment in the rear of the bus or the roof in a compartment.
I like the price of the residential machines. If one were to build a compartment that housed the ac unit allowing apropriate ventilation and direct the cool air up into the bus via floor vents I think it could work very well. You could even have one at the front and a seperate one at the rear for keeping sleeping area's cool in the evenings.
This way the unit(s) would be out of the sun and UV rays which over time break down plastic, not interfear with a roof deck, and be much less noisey for those on the bus and those outside of the bus.
Just a thought at this point, but I don't see any reason it would not work. -Richard
I have been considering an alternative to a ceiling mount since I purchased my bus. I am 6' 2" and once I have footwear the ceiling is awfully low. So adding more things to hang below it or protrude is NOT what I am after. The concern is buying a machine that does not hang down too far. But I already have a container that hangs down 21" for my propane tank that runs the appliances. Also the generator, which will/would be housed in a compartment in the rear of the bus or the roof in a compartment.
I like the price of the residential machines. If one were to build a compartment that housed the ac unit allowing apropriate ventilation and direct the cool air up into the bus via floor vents I think it could work very well. You could even have one at the front and a seperate one at the rear for keeping sleeping area's cool in the evenings.
This way the unit(s) would be out of the sun and UV rays which over time break down plastic, not interfear with a roof deck, and be much less noisey for those on the bus and those outside of the bus.
Just a thought at this point, but I don't see any reason it would not work. -Richard