I'm a little old to be playing at camping in sub zero weather. lol. have woke up with my bottled water froze solid, but that was 20 yrs ago. now when it gets that cold, well, these old bones don't like the cold much. they put those heat controls in the bunk area for a reason, ya know.
what to you do to stay warm?
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by oldslowchevy, Nov 2, 2012.
Page 5 of 8
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Ya, i dont know how guys do it. My cutoff is around 40. Im sorry but in a cheap, non insulated freightshaker, 40 degrees is cold.
All these guys that say they dont idle till its in the teens are either goofy or full of it I think. Nobody would wait to turn the heat on at
home in those temps!! Just my opinion, and everybody has their own tolerances i suppose -
After you go camping when it's 10F out in basketball shorts because of a metal frame around your leg that prevents you from putting pants on or getting in a sleeping bag, sleeping in a cold truck is never a problem again.
I'd post a picture of the metal, but I don't think most would like it. -
Oops, meant to edit
-
Plenty of covers and blankets
-
I have a Coleman sleeping bag ( I highly recommend) and a blanket. But for the most part I idle and my bunk blower went out ao I usually have to open the curtains to let heat flow to the back. But once its 45 degrees or below I idle. The bf used to keep me worm but since I had to cut him loose I have to cuddle up with the dog in my sleeping bag until the heat gets warms the back.
Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk 2 -
I've always been spoiled. In the beginning it was idling and then evolved to bunk heaters. I remember getting stuck in St.Paul and -30 out. The bunk heater kept me toasty.
But I've had my share of cold weather camping. When I was in the army we were in the field and it rained all day and that night it dropped down in the teens. I spent a week in the hospital with pneumonia. That taught me how to stay warm! -
German Army sleeping bag, neatest thing since the tent. Has arms and the bottom opens folds back to be used as a coat. good to minus 50 by itself can get an optional liner for it that they use at the south pole.
-
Of course I have not experienced cold weather in a truck YET, but I do have a lot of experience winter camping in subzero temperatures and here is some of the things I would do to stay warm at night in a mummy bag inside a tent in the Adirondacks.
Take one of those chemical hand warmers and open it up. When it gets exposed to the air it starts to heat up. Throw in in the bottom of your bag for a nice toasty night. They last just about long enough for a good nights sleep.
When the temperature is below freezing (and only when the temperature is below freezing, otherwise you will sweat all night long and get sick), get inside one of those "space blanket" sleeping bags or what is known as a bivouac bag made of silvery Mylar. Then, get inside your sleeping bag. By sealing the mylar around your body and then sealing the mummy bag around you on the outside, you create a perfect vapor barrier to keep your body heat in. Again.. the problem is if the temperature is above freezing you will sweat so DON'T DO IT.
If you are not running any heat and sleeping without idling, the inside of your truck may develop frost on the inside and it can actually snow inside your truck! How do you stop this from happening? Well.. all that moisture is actually coming from your body and from your breath. The simplest way to solve this problem is to ventilate. Leave a window cracked somewhere even if it is subzero out. Again... this will only happen when you are not providing any kind of heat inside from idling or a bunk heater.
Well... there's some of what I used to do for winter sleeping.texasbbqbest and Logan76 Thank this. -
holy crap i may try that hand warmer thing im good on everything else as snow in the truck and sweating till im sick is not my thing lol
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 5 of 8