โSep-28-2013 10:27 PM
โOct-16-2013 04:38 PM
โOct-15-2013 06:14 AM
krinkle wrote:
I bought a 3 cubic ft freezer from WM. 22X22X22 32 inches high.
Had it shipped to store ..free shipping. Holds 100lb of meat.
We put one of our chairs up in the bathroom hallway. Put freezer where chair was between table and couch. Put cardboard under so it stays in place when putting slide out. Therefore ending up in living area not in the slide. Might be to much weight. We live in S E Mo. Go to Florida in Jan. Freezer stays cold while traveling plug in at night. When getting to destination we either put it under 5ver outside or remove one rocker at home and put it in rear of living area where that one chair was. Use a reclining lawn chair in front of freezer.. Works for us the inconvenience is worth it. Happy RVing.
โOct-14-2013 07:11 PM
โOct-05-2013 09:05 AM
โOct-04-2013 10:05 PM
whitebb wrote:
We full time and have a haier freezer in basement storage and keeps stuff froze all day as we travel. Works for us. also used it in the motor home before getting the 5th wheel. Good luck.:)
โOct-04-2013 08:24 PM
โOct-04-2013 04:57 PM
โOct-02-2013 08:26 AM
โOct-01-2013 07:57 PM
โSep-30-2013 10:26 PM
MookieKat wrote:Dutch & Di wrote:
When we removed our gas stove & oven 10 years ago to put in a glass cooktop we had to do something to put in the gaping hole where the oven was. Dutch built a sliding shelf and we found a small freezer that works on shore power and battery. He built a door unless you open the door, you don't know a freezer is there. I don't need an oven as I have the microwave convection which I use daily.
We do have an inverter and generator so we don't have to worry about not being hooked up.
If you don't have that, I don't see why things wouldn't stay frozen just as they do in the fridge/freezer that some people {not us} turn off when traveling.
Let us know what you decide. Di
Please tell us how you did that, and what exact units you used! Especially the glass cook top!! I thought that we would have to use a counter top induction element, but I was wishing that we could do something like you are talking about! I did not realize that there was one that would fit exactly into that space!
I wonder why the manufacturers do not offer an electric cook top option?
โSep-29-2013 09:57 PM
Dutch & Di wrote:
When we removed our gas stove & oven 10 years ago to put in a glass cooktop we had to do something to put in the gaping hole where the oven was. Dutch built a sliding shelf and we found a small freezer that works on shore power and battery. He built a door unless you open the door, you don't know a freezer is there. I don't need an oven as I have the microwave convection which I use daily.
We do have an inverter and generator so we don't have to worry about not being hooked up.
If you don't have that, I don't see why things wouldn't stay frozen just as they do in the fridge/freezer that some people {not us} turn off when traveling.
Let us know what you decide. Di
โSep-29-2013 09:35 PM
โSep-29-2013 03:03 PM
Vulcaneer wrote:Us out West wrote:ontheroad101 wrote:
Think about changing out you RV refrigerator for a residential refrigerator. We went from 12 cubic foot to 21 cubic foot. We do have a inverter and a generator.
Best answer, especially for full-timers...or even if you spend most of the year RVing.
I'm thinking the 21 Cu Ft residential would be trouble. Fill it with food and it becomes very heavy. Even if you could fit it into the hole, it would create a problem over the road. Bouncing that much weight on your frame? No thanks...not me. If you are fulltime PARKED, then you can prop it up better.
Open Range makes a "Residential" model 5th wheel. The big difference is the fridge/freezer. A four door 12 cu ft version. Freezer is 4 cuft, fridge is 8 cuft. Operates on 110 AC and 12V DC. Not on propane. When traveling it runs off the trucks electrical. When parked it operates off C/G electricity. If off grid, you need a gen. Plenty of capacity.
We do some boondocking. So we have the 12 cuft 4 door AC/Propane version. We do have a gen, but we use it for other things. Fridge/freezer has plenty of capacity for us.
โSep-29-2013 01:16 PM
Us out West wrote:ontheroad101 wrote:
Think about changing out you RV refrigerator for a residential refrigerator. We went from 12 cubic foot to 21 cubic foot. We do have a inverter and a generator.
Best answer, especially for full-timers...or even if you spend most of the year RVing.