Forum Discussion
John___Angela
Mar 03, 2015Explorer
RayChez wrote:
I always have wondered, what happens to the motor on a residential refrigerator when the batteries start going dead and the motor starts dragging. Isn't that bad for the motor? Is that why they do not warranty residential refrigerators IF you are going to install them on an RV that does not have the solar and extra inverter? I am talking about dry camping with no shore power or auto-start on your generator.
Good morning Ray. Its one one of those "it depends" answers that we all hate but generally speaking the output of an inverter doesn't drop as the batteries get weaker. The inverters internal "inverters, voltage and current regulators" are designed to provide a fixed voltage (or acceptable range thereof) regardless of input until ,for lack of a better way to describe it, they can't. At that point they simply cut off. The load never sees that drop...in theory. I can say though that at least one of my inverters will drop to about 108 volts under low battery voltage before it gives up. A little outside of my comfort zone but the reality is that only seems to happen under heavy load like a microwave. A refrigerator is roughly the same load as a TV (around an amp) so it doesn't get dragged down at all. And having said that I guess thats why I like to see dedicated installs for the fridge so there is no chance of something else loading on the inverter although really it is more the affect of dropping input voltage and current. We have two inverters in our Rig. Neither is dedicated to the fridge but I run them so that the microwave and fridge are not on the same inverter although for the most part I would think it would be fine anyway.
Again, all just my humble opinion.
on edit, fixed an error where I called an inverter a converter, or mayby the iphone spell check did...yah thats what happened. :)
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