Fantastic fan 6600r installation
It's certainly not bad at all, just not the ideal. The C charger terminates maxV at 1. It's the gold standard, but the La Crosse is very close.
So close that I'd say it's a toss up, really. You will not go wrong getting either one, and you shouldn't look back or second-guess in either case. The La Crosse chargers are probably a little easier to set up less pushing of buttons , and you have to be a little more focused and careful with the Maha to ensure you are setting it up like you want, but really and truly they are both equally easy, and equally tedious. My main point in mentioning it above is that the chargers that come with Eneloops, or the "fast" or "minute" chargers you can guy at Walmart and other retail outlets, are the worst chargers you can get for batteries.
You get what you pay for. I carry in the truck the Intellicharger i4 mainly for , , and Li-Ions and the Maha. The La Crosse is at the house for anyone there to use, since it's a little easier for someone not obsessed with the various minutiae of batteries to use. At the moment, the Maha is also at the house. I left it there the last time I was home. Fortunately the Intellicharger is an excellent substitute for the Maha or the La Crosse.
The reviews at Amazon are good and informative, but some of the most impressive ones especially that "NLee the Engineer" gentleman can be misleading or incorrect about some important things. He reviews and recommends, for example, the AccuPower charger as being just as good as the La Crosse, only about half the price. It is indeed a La Crosse knockoff, using the same controller, and it's very similar, but the difference are much more substantial than the minor difference between the Maha and La Crosse it's four channels at once, not independent channels as it might appear.
Don't be tempted to get the AccuPower, you'll get what you pay for. If you want the real anal lowdown on chargers, read Candlepower Forums. Those people are just freaks many of them are electrical engineers and experts in their fields about batteries, flashlights, LEDs and all things candlepower related, and will often do more thorough and exhaustive repeated testing than the manufacturers perform. Most of the reviews are incredibly detailed. When the Candlepower Forums folks sneeze, manufacturers wipe their own noses.
They're that influential. Manufacturers have had to change their own published specs. They were the ones to identify, diagnose and provide the solution for the overheating problem of the early La Crosse chargers, for example, which La Crosse then implemented exactly in subsequent chargers. My Fantastic is in its tenth year trouble free. Sure its only 3 speed but it reverses, power raises. As to its lack of remote control, I plan to have my arm lengthened 11 inches.
On the other hand Linda would be proud that I am getting the exercise. Thanks for the post im shopping for a fan now. For consumers tall or short; with old or new Towables or Motorized RVs, this patent pending air exchange system makes operation as simple as sitting in your easy chair and pushing a button. Fan-Tastic's IR Remote With Wall Cradle With the automatic mode, you select your comfort setting and the blades will automatically turn on, off, increase or decrease speed to maintain your temperature choice.
Manual mode allows you to select off or one of 14 fan blade speeds. Fan-Tastic's custom wall cradle is made for your convenience. A built-in thermostat maintains your desired comfort level. When the rain sensor becomes wet the dome automatically closes and reopens once sensor dries. The built-in manual knob allows for closing the dome in a emergency. Automation at its finest. Raise the dome and activate the fan from your "easy" chair. Our radio frequency handheld remote has you activating the fan and raising the dome by pressing the mode pad.
With the automatic speed mode, you select your comfort setting and the blades will automatically turn on, off, increase or decrease speed to maintain your temperature choice.
The manual speed mode allows you to select off or one of 14 fan blade speeds. Our custom wall cradle is made for your convenience. Select an easily accessible location, install the lightweight cradle and operate your fan from cradled remote or remove and operate the fan from anywhere inside or outside your coach. Installing a fantastic RV vent on the roof of your RV is a pretty simple job when replacing an existing vent with 12 volt wiring nearby.
First, you will need to remove the inside vent garnish. This is normally fastened to the ceiling with 4 screws. Remove the screws and remove the garnish. Next, you will need to disconnect any wiring to the existing vent if it has a fan in it already. Now you will have to get up on the roof and scrape the caulk away from the screws that are around the perimeter of the vent flange.
Once the screws are removed, carefully insert a putty knife in between the vent flange and the roof material and gently pry up on the vent. While prying the vent, be careful not to pull to hard on the vent as you risk tearing the roof material. Once the vent is removed clean the existing caulk and putty or butyl tape material from around the perimeter of the 14 x 14 opening in the roof.
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