gemini5362 said:
I started to post a reply yesterday and had to shut my computer down. I could not find this thread easily so decided to search for the word giraffe. Would you believe that there are not a lot of threads on TBN that have the word giraffe in them.
Eddie I might have an idea or two.
No matter who wires your site mistakes happen I would get me an electrical polarity tester. They are not expensive I believe under 20 dollars or so. The plug in to an outlet and tell you if a ground wire is wired to the green screw in the receptacle, The neutral to the white screw and the hot wire to the gold screw. This is very important to have done correctly and with them installing that many outlets it would be prudent to check them. I also assume you are going to have either GFI outlets or breakers. I would set myself up a Preventative maintenance checklist on a regular basis to test them. I would also make sure that all my wireing is labeled very well. I would have the location and breaker number for each rv hookup and for each receptacle. If someone pulls in to hook up and a breaker for that pad is tripped it is nice to have the location stenciled right on the box at the pad as well as on your electrical circuits blueprints.
I noticed on a show that they now make LED light bulbs to replace incandescent light bulbs. You might want to check out the price on them for your pathway lights. The take almost no electricity and LED bulbs last for a long long long time. In the show I was watching they did a reliability test by turning lights off and on every two seconds all the other types of lights they tested burned out but the LED bulbs were still going strong at the end of the test.
Having a place for horses is a great Idea. I am sure people that travel with horses carry sometype of vacine record. I dont know what diseases are prevalent any more. When my kids were younger and I bought them a horse you had to worry about coggins disease.
Since you are going to carry propane for sell I am assuming you will have a big tank to fill from. Have you considered getting a backup power generator that runs on propane.
Wireless internet. I think that is almost a must have . The way you do it is the big question. I believe I would go ahead and run cat 5E or cat6 cable to each pad site. The last time I bought cat 5 cable it was 8 cents a foot in 1000 foot rolls. If you run cables to the sites there are some advantages and disadvantages. the disadvantages first: you can only run cat 5 or cat 6 300 feet without a repeater (they do the same thing, they differ from cat 5 in that they are designed to run a faster speed.) for repeaters you can get ethernet switches really cheap now and that would do as a signal booster. the other disadvantage is that they really dont need to be run alongside power cables if you can avoid it. the positives: with a cable at each site you dont have to worry about whether you have good rf coverage on each site. If someone needs wireless for their laptop you can give them a wireless access node. You can either rent these or let them use them free with a deposit. In your restraunt or in a lobby area wireless internet is mandatory. I went on a trip last year to yellowstone national park and bryce canyon. In several of the hotels we stayed at they did not have internet in the rooms but had wireless internet in the lobby I was amazed at how many people set in chairs in the lobby to use their laptops. A lot of buisnessment cant spend a day without access to emails. My wife has to take her laptop on vacation in case someone has an emergency and needs something taken care of. Some people just use their laptop to email the kids at home because it is a cheap way to stay in touch.
I noticed you were going to see about a t1 line. I looked at a t1 line once upon a time for a buisness years ago. It was frightfully expensive. I have never looked at it but for some reason DSL and cable seems to be faster than a t1 for a lot less money. If you have DSL avaliable I might try getting one of those and see how that works. I believe most of the hotels I have stayed at use DSL for their internet. If it works for you but seems to be a little too slow when you are full of customers then get a second one. you can always split the park up among two routers.
I might if I were you take the plans for my park to the University of Texas computer engineering department and see if they would let the students design a network for the internet. It would be a good real life problem for the students to tackle and free engineering if you can get it is always good
Your idea for this thread was a great one I am enjoying reading it.
Gemini,
Thanks for the great advice. I've heard from owners of RV Parks that they make it a priority to re-tighten the lugs on there electrical terminals every six months. They blame the aluminum wire, but I don't think they used any aluminum sealer.
I'll have to have a monthly planner with everything that needs to be done every month throughout the year. Taxes are the obvious one, but also meds for animals and PM'ing certain parts of the park. Filters for AC units, lint traps in the laundromat and dozens and dozens of other things.
The labeling of the wires is a good idea. Thanks.
For the internet, I wasn't thinking ot Cat 5 wire, but co-axial. A park near here did that and is having great results. It's just what he's told me, so I could easily be wrong. Any thoughts on using it?
Internet access is probably the biggest thing I'll have to provide. I don't want guest to have to pay extra for it, so I'll factor it into my rates. One of the problems I have with Wi-Fi is the added price guests have to pay. I know some parks are now starting to offer it for free to guests, so that's an option too.
The T1 line was so expensive they wouldn't even quote me a price to run it. There is no way to get DSL, but they said a Sub T1 would be allot cheaper and still give me enough to run a couple hundred connections.
I'm still pretty clueless on which is the best option and kind of waiting until the last minute to decide. It keeps changing and more options are always presenting themselves.
I'm also curious about the wireless cell phone connections like Verizon. There is a towere that you can see from several locations here, so the might work too. Unfortunately I don't know very much about this aproach.
I like the idea of seeing if the University students will want to try and design the parks internet system. They might just be up on the latest technology and come up with some good ideas.
I'm still clearing land and don't know how many sites I'll have yet, nor do I know the exact distances. Once I get those figured out and on a Plat, then I'll be good to go for my exact layout. Electrical is free from my supplier. Plumbing is a no brainer and sewer is designed by an engineer. Internet is my big mystery. hahaha
I'm a big fan of LED lights, but did't know they had them available for outdoor lighting. That would be perfect. Low energy use and not too bright.
I don't think I could afford a generater big enough to do very much here. I'm gonna be in the tens of thousands of amps. My sewage collection system will have a generator, but that's about it. I have lost power here from time to time, but since I'm on the same grid as the sewer plant, I'm pretty quick to be back up and running again. There is a hospital down the road, but I think they are on a different grid.
If it becomes an issue, I'll have natural gas to the store and if I have to, I'll put one in there to save my food. Who knows how much money I'll have in food stuff for the resturant? hahaha
Thanks,
Eddie