So, I feel like kind of an idiot; I'm usually fairly handy, but I'm pretty much flummoxed on this one. We recently bought a 2014 Keystone 269FWRL, and I have no idea where the battery is, or the cutoff switch! Unfortunately, I can't find anything online, and the owners manual is unlike a car's, and has no model specific information.
We bought the trailer from a couple whose wife was living in it, as her husband was working too far away to commute, and they didn't want her to move for about a year and a half. So, when we were having issues with the power on our maiden voyage, I figured that the battery simply hadn't been maintained, and had boiled dry, or some such. Easy enough fix, to either recondition or replace, except... I can't find the dadgum thing! I've checked all through the basement, and honestly, I'd rather not take off the undercoat if I don't need to (I'd rather not risk tearing it up somehow). There are two propane tanks, one on either side, and then just what appear to be the standard doors for the basement. It is possible that I've overlooked it, although that would make me feel even more like a doof... sigh.
Any help would be greatly appreciated; it would be nice on our next trip to see how long a battery actually holds a charge. Not that we have designs on boondocking any time soon, but better to know, just in case, right...?
Thanks in advance...
We bought the trailer from a couple whose wife was living in it, as her husband was working too far away to commute, and they didn't want her to move for about a year and a half. So, when we were having issues with the power on our maiden voyage, I figured that the battery simply hadn't been maintained, and had boiled dry, or some such. Easy enough fix, to either recondition or replace, except... I can't find the dadgum thing! I've checked all through the basement, and honestly, I'd rather not take off the undercoat if I don't need to (I'd rather not risk tearing it up somehow). There are two propane tanks, one on either side, and then just what appear to be the standard doors for the basement. It is possible that I've overlooked it, although that would make me feel even more like a doof... sigh.
Any help would be greatly appreciated; it would be nice on our next trip to see how long a battery actually holds a charge. Not that we have designs on boondocking any time soon, but better to know, just in case, right...?
Thanks in advance...