Here you go:
http://www.trailmanorowners.com/foru...99&postcount=1
It was easy. More than half the time was spent removing the old 3-way. A the bottom, neither the "normal flange" nor the "thin flange" can fit- don't waste money ordering the thin flange, because you'll only be throwing it away. You cut and varnish varnish a few pieces of wood to fill in the small gap under the door.
You use a plane to widen TM's front framing, about 1/8" on each vertical side. If you convert the "T" junction into a straight-through union (going only to the water heater), then you need to have a flare tool. (That's what I did.) Others have left the "T" in place, merely cutting and capping off the fridge propane supply tube.
It holds nearly 50% more stuff, and looks stunning with the stainless steel door. Runs quiet, maintains cold temps in more than 100F ambient, and doesn't freeze your lettuce in the colder pre-dawn hours. We love it!
But with our older model, there is only one thermostat. It measures temps in the well-insulated fridge section, and will not keep the freezer section cold enough (ice cream) when ambient temps are below 90F. We have added a thin layer "space blanket" insulation between the freezer and fridge sections, to help maintain colder freezer temps. That works pretty well.
IIRC, all owners of the Fridge have Solar Power.