I use a BLUE AIR floor-unit air purifier.
Table fans work. Used them for years to increase the return rate. It’s about size (small), location (experiment), and blade speed (low). Have to do something at the eddy or stagnation point.
This is what I use up front:
https://www.vornado.com/shop/circulators-fans/personal-compact/pivot-personal-air-circulator
Once I’m parked and have had several hours of cooldown, the need for a second A/C unit on this 35’ TT almost disappears if temps stay below 100F. The game is then played with controls for exterior shade & interior windows; as above.
Mini-blinds and no awnings, yeah, the interior would heat pretty fast. Have fifty-plus years experience with this sort of heat in an aluminum TT. I get asked pretty often at campgrounds whether awnings help, or how-on-earth-can-you-stay-comfortable-with-one-A/C-unit?
If I had children along, then a 9k unit at rear bedroom would pick up the slack for entrance door in constant/use.
As they aren’t popular any more (cost-cutting)
jalousie windows capture breezes which sliders don’t. Meaning one can open windows earlier and close them later. Having three (powered) roof vents is the other. One learns to work with prevailing breeze to expedite hot air expulsion.
It isn’t the expense or difficulty of another A/C so much as it’s dependence on electricity to be comfortable. Pushing that temp barrier higher is a worthwhile goal.
This is one aspect of
self-contained. I think it was Wally Byam coined that term. It was him who convinced a manufacturer to design & build the first propane furnace to allow its use (Airstream, circa 1957).
I’ve found it a handy way to plan potential upgrades if we divide all needs by power source. An example is the propane furnace. A retrofit with (bad name) CHEAP HEAT unit to utilize the blower and ducting can be done to lower propane use (or bypass), same as with having 3-way refrigerator/freezers. Or, having an induction burner with which to cook versus sole use of propane. Etc.
Propane gensets were an available option on these trailers in the 1970s. I’ve seen recent custom examples. Solar is the replacement as keeping house batteries charged is the thing.
On electric mains? Run the whole rig that way.
Propane only? Come close. (Propane lamp should be added).
The all-around best question is,
Given X-persons aboard, what is the maximum number of nights aboard without any re-supply? Water & Propane are the limiting factors. Big capacity is a winner. Two forty-lb propane tanks and 70-gals water go quite a ways.
I believe 30-nights given one can access water to clean/filter is a goal to sketch out. (Bladder & separate water pump to retrieve water remotely using truck bed).
Having a way to leverage that CTD as Genset would be the ideal. PTO to hydraulic power unit (as on fire or utility truck). I’ve seen the 7500 Onan diesel built onto a chassis cab, but weight and service access was hell past expense.
A/C is an expensive luxury off of the mains.
Which campground then becomes the task.
Would I want to run the CTD 36-hours at high idle? No, but I’d consider the investment a worthwhile undertaking for emergency purposes. Children, the elderly, and the sick & injured are surely worth what’s required prior to evacuation.
As that’s the last part of being self-contained:
it’s not a toy, it’s a family asset.
Those dumb enough to ride out a hurricane soon find that the aftermath is the problem. A gasoline Genset will be worn out and have consumed a big shelf full of engine oil & filters before power restored.
A 60-gal pickup truck tank looks a whole lot better if trapped from leaving. Get gone when the roads are cleared.
Obtain the right design/construction of TT and it’s one that your toddler grandchildren could inherit as adults. My fathers’ trailer is still in use at 49-years. “Expense” doesn’t mean as much when one looks at two decades or more versus five years. And not be limited by tow vehicle choice, either.
I’ve seen a pic of that mobile command center. That’d make quite a HAM shack, huh? I’m not a fan of 5’ers, but acquisition of the somewhat rare AVION unit could be incentive. 38’, true aero, low COG and about 14K empty :
.