Skid Row Joe wrote:
Grandpere wrote:
Finally got rid of that useless residential fridge and got it replaced with an RV fridge that runs on propane, 120 volt and 12 volt. Now we can get back to dry camping and going down the highway without having to listen to the generator.
My thoughts as well on having a residential, AC only refrigerator - makes no sense for those of us that don't want to jockey running the generator endlessly when doing a lot of dry camping or boondocking when out and about.
What brand and size refrigerator freezer did you buy, and where/what was your source for it?
Boy what disdain for things you don't know or understand..
We have no cares or wants to go back to a RV fridge, our residential fridge has more space and it does something an abosorbsion fridge CAN'T do.. Keep a consistent COLD temperature IN THE SAFE ZONE.
Our residential fridge easily keeps the fridge section 34F-36F day and night now matter how hot it is outside.
No more battling solid frozen milk in the morning but yet by evening the fridge temps were in the UPPER 50s (well above the safe temp for refrigerated foods) when the outdoor temps reached 90F+.
We battled that losing battle in our first TT, but no more..
We no longer need to wait 24hrs for the fridge to get to temp before loading.. Nope, it is at operating temp in less than 1/2 hr!
We have NO PROBLEM running our residential fridge FOR 24 HRS on ONE PAI of 6V GC batts plus furnace and lights.. Heck if we added two 200W solar panels we could easily go nearly two days on the pair of GC batts without the need for a gen..
We also no longer need to worry about leveling.. Residential fridges don't mind at all being operated off level..
We also now enjoy having ROCK HARD ice cream, our RV fridge would just melt the ice cream into a lump of mush..
When our residential fridge dies it will only cost $340 to replace it instead of a $600 cooling unit or a new $1500 RV fridge..
What ever floats your boat, glad you like your RV fridge..