Hey forum, first post!
I attempted to search the forum to see if there is already a thread on this - If there is my apologies, I could find none.
I am in the business of shipping temperature-sensitive freight, and with some frequency, our drivers do overnight trips. I'm looking to have a remote starter wired to be controlled by a thermostat - That is, start the vehicle when it reaches a set point and run it until it falls below that set point. There doesn't seem to be a product that does this out of the box - There is one that I found that will "Hot start" with a maximum setting of 77* (already too hot for us) and will only run for a brief 5-minute period, once per hour - Or something to that nature. I believe this was a compustar. This will not be sufficient, we need to keep the cargo areas below 75* and it needs to continue to run as long as necessary to accomplish this, un-attended as the driver sleeps in a hotel.
I imagine this can be accomplished with a third-party thermostat, either household-type 24-v or 220v (as for electric baseboard heat), with or without the use of transformers, relays, etc, but frankly I know very little about how a remote starter works. Is there somewhere within the wiring of a remote starter where a simple binary signal can be sent that will inform the system to run it's full "Yes, run vehicle" routine?
Vehicles concerned are Ford Transits, Ram Promasters, and a Mercedes Sprinter, although I expect that's moot in this case because my assumption is that we'll have to install 3rd party remote starters (none are currently equipped).
I would love to hear anyone's thoughts on this. Engine-off fuel fired heaters are quite common and inexpensive, but engine-off cooling involves installation of a generator and a whole host of extremely expensive modifications.
I'm kind of shocked that a commercially available system that does this doesn't already exist (or if it does, it's hiding), surely I'm not the first person to run into this predicament? Even a very reputable upfitter in my area had no solutions to offer, other than the $16,000 generator upfit (which also involved hauling the generator on a movable shelf behind the vehicle).
I thank you all in advance for any help you can provide!