I have an older coach with 15 year old A/C units and a Webasto diesel furnace (predecessor to Aqua Hot, I believe).
During last winter in South Texas I relied on the Webasto during December and burned nearly 70 gallons of diesel in that single month. After that I picked up a couple of electric space heaters to offset the furnace. While the resistance heaters did keep the furnace from burning up another one-half tank of diesel for the rest of the winter season, they weren't very satisfactory either.
Meanwhile, a Tiffin owner next to me said his heat pump units covered most of his needs with his Aqua Hot only firing occasionally.
Consequently, I'd like to replace my aging roof A/C's with heat pump units to get a little more effective heating at moderately cool temperatures, while still using the Webasto if it gets really cold.
I understand the issues of heat at the ceiling, etc. with the heat pumps and figure I can overcome that.
However, I have a thermostat wiring issue that is a more significant issue. Since the coach was only wired for A/C units it doesn't have an extra wire from the Tstat to the roof-top unit to control the heat pump side of operation.
Carrier made a unit with the temperature control in the overhead unit which would have allowed me to use the existing Tstat wiring to get control back to the furnace, when needed. Unfortunately, Carrier has apparently decided to pull out of the RV business. Neither of the other logical makers -- Dometic and Coleman -- seem to offer any similar option.
Has anyone replaced pure A/C units with heat pumps and overcome this issue without tearing up the inside of the coach to add control wiring?
As a footnote to an already lengthy post I did try to contact RVP with a concept for using one of the fan control wires (involving wiring both fan controls to one wire at the Tstat and separating them at the overhead with a SPDT to move A/C fan control to the overhead). I never got past the first step before the fellow that answered the phone went ballistic and flatly said "impossible".