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sparkydave's avatar
sparkydave
Explorer
Sep 14, 2022

Compressor refrigerator opinons

The wife and I are trading up from our trusty old 2004 Rockwood 1940LTD popup to a 2022 Wolf Pup 14CC. We're pretty excited, we went the the Cleveland RV show last weekend after browsing a bunch of small travel trailers, and we fell in love with this Wolf Pup. Got a good deal and a deposit on it, and the dealer called to say we can pick it up next weekend. I'll miss my old popup since it was my first camper and I've made a lot of improvements in it. I won't miss the set up and take down, and we won't miss the mad dash to the bath house when nature calls in the early AM.

I saw that it has a 12 volt compressor refrigerator (and a freezer!), are they good? I'm inclined to think they'll cool off a little faster than the absorption fridge, just wondering if there have been any teething difficulties since they seem to be a relatively new thing compared to the tried but true absorption refrigerators.

23 Replies

  • With ample batteries and solar recharging, you’ll be in great shape. Congratulations on the new rig.
  • It's not new technology. 12v compressor fridges are industry standard in the boating world for decades...of course, that doesn't mean they put a quality unit in an RV.

    We have one in our 2021 Gray Wolf 22RR. Everchill is the brand. So far with around 18 months of use (full time usage except for 7 months last winter), it has worked well. It has pros and cons:

    Cons:
    - If you are off grid, you will need to upgrade the battery bank and solar (or plan to run the generator a fair bit).
    - Ours came with a 50w solar panel from the factory. It's not enough for off grid camping. It does sound like they may have upgraded on newer units to 100-150w which may be enough if you keep your other consumption down. (the single stock battery is still likely not enough)

    Pros:
    - The mechanicals are drastically smaller, with the net result that for the same cabinet space, you get around 50% more storage space.
    - Yes, it cools faster.
    - If you have a seasonal site where you pay for electricity used, it only pulls about 50w when running vs 300-400w for an absorption fridge on electric.
    - No roof or wall penetrations needed, so reduces chances for water damage.

    For camping with shorepower, it's a nice option.
    For off grid camping, you need to plan at least on upgrading the battery bank and preferably the solar (if it's a shady site, expect you may still need to run the generator)

    Overall, we are happy with it so far.
  • It should work better than an absorption fridge does and just about as good as the one in your house.