Glad to see you back. I am planning to live in a Prius as I travel around the US looking for land to buy to settle down. I work a lot online, though, and would like to DIY a solid office I could work 8 hours a day in. If you ever cover how you've worked in your car, I'd be very interested :)
JS I have seen someone hang a tray/desk off of their steering wheel, and I’m pretty sure this Vlogger sometimes rents coworker space in one of those co-rent workspaces - but I guess that can cost a bit.
Thanks! It's good to be back on this channel with more regularity. Since I spend so much time focused on work, I have found a number of options for working while car living. I will try to do a video on that subject in the next week. I have a couple of other videos in the works, but I will put that topic on the list. Thanks, again, for the comment!
Amazing the insurance company gave him full value for it. Wouldn't running the heater in the winter also dry out the humidity? It dries out my skin and my sinuses so surely it would work on the humidity.
I think that running the heater does help a little. I actually got some good feedback from members of this community about dehumidifying. I will do a follow-up video soon. Thanks for the comment!
Yes. I have done that many times, but I got used to sleeping in a wider range of temperatures, so I don't run my car at night as often as I used to. Thanks for the comment!
Most cars you can run the AC and heat at the same time, the best way to defog the windshield during rain from my experience. Imagine it would work to dehumidify in colder weather.
If you have dual zone climate control set one side to 65 degrees on ac and the other side to 75 on heat. It'll balance the temperature around 70 and the cold side will pull moisture from the air like a dehumidifier.
Would you say for those living in PNW, where humidity outside is high all the time (85% right now), is your car basically screwed? Molds gonna happen no matter what?
Even in humid climates, I think that steps can be taken to reduce the risk of mold. I received some good comments and ideas from subscribers, so I will do a follow-up video soon to highlight some ideas for working to reduce the risk of mold, specially in humid climates. Thanks for the comment!
Glad to see you back. I am planning to live in a Prius as I travel around the US looking for land to buy to settle down. I work a lot online, though, and would like to DIY a solid office I could work 8 hours a day in. If you ever cover how you've worked in your car, I'd be very interested :)
JS I have seen someone hang a tray/desk off of their steering wheel, and I’m pretty sure this Vlogger sometimes rents coworker space in one of those co-rent workspaces - but I guess that can cost a bit.
Thanks! It's good to be back on this channel with more regularity.
Since I spend so much time focused on work, I have found a number of options for working while car living. I will try to do a video on that subject in the next week. I have a couple of other videos in the works, but I will put that topic on the list. Thanks, again, for the comment!
Amazing the insurance company gave him full value for it. Wouldn't running the heater in the winter also dry out the humidity? It dries out my skin and my sinuses so surely it would work on the humidity.
I think that running the heater does help a little. I actually got some good feedback from members of this community about dehumidifying. I will do a follow-up video soon. Thanks for the comment!
Couldn’t you keep the a/c on while you sleep? Maybe at 70 degrees. I thought you could with a Prius.
Yes. I have done that many times, but I got used to sleeping in a wider range of temperatures, so I don't run my car at night as often as I used to. Thanks for the comment!
Most cars you can run the AC and heat at the same time, the best way to defog the windshield during rain from my experience. Imagine it would work to dehumidify in colder weather.
That is helpful information. Thank you for sharing. In fact, I will mention that in a follow-up video that I do this week. Thanks again!
If you have dual zone climate control set one side to 65 degrees on ac and the other side to 75 on heat. It'll balance the temperature around 70 and the cold side will pull moisture from the air like a dehumidifier.
Would you say for those living in PNW, where humidity outside is high all the time (85% right now), is your car basically screwed? Molds gonna happen no matter what?
Even in humid climates, I think that steps can be taken to reduce the risk of mold. I received some good comments and ideas from subscribers, so I will do a follow-up video soon to highlight some ideas for working to reduce the risk of mold, specially in humid climates. Thanks for the comment!
Another useful stuff thank you
Thanks!
I think you said you sleep with your head towards the back, that might have something to do with it in your case
Good point. Thanks for watching the video, and thank you for the comment!