โOct-13-2013 02:53 PM
โOct-14-2013 02:26 PM
โOct-14-2013 12:12 PM
two-niner wrote:I'll second that. A residential fridge is very power efficient because of consumer demand to reduce home electrical costs. A good fridge will stay cold for hours off power. Last hurricane related power outage I didn't need to drag out the home generator until the next day when the ice cream started getting soft. But I will say if my general outing plans included a lot of time off the grid I would stick to the propane powered fridge.
Seattle Steve is correct.
Kerry
โOct-14-2013 11:11 AM
โOct-14-2013 09:36 AM
WyoTraveler wrote:jts140 wrote:
Kids getting older. Driving soon and now I am looking into a used DP for wife and I. Owned several travel trailers in the past, always had electric/propane refrigerators. As I look online I see class As with residential refrigerators. I take it will have run on batteries while not driving or plugged in.
With good batteries how long is it safe for. I know this is opened ended, but some basic answers which can help me in my search would be great.
When you are looking at RVs open the refer door. Check out power requirements. Divide 12 volts into wattage. How long can you pull that amps and run your batteries down to only half. One I looked at was 650 watts. (54 amps) You need to do the math on the one you are interested in. May be lower than that. 54 amps drain for 12 hours back to 650 amp hours. Need a battery bank good for at least 1300 amp hours over night just for the fridge then add another 3 to 400 for rest of RV Battery bank capable of 1500 to 2000 amp hours would handle the job. The coach I looked at had a 2000 watt inverter and 4 t2 batteries @ $500 each. Still very marginal for even 8 hours. The big problem is how long will you have to drive to charge those batteries back up again? Fridge drawing 54 amps and charging at 54 amp. your alternator will have to charge at about 108 amps just to keep up.
โOct-14-2013 08:43 AM
โOct-13-2013 07:03 PM
โOct-13-2013 05:31 PM
โOct-13-2013 05:30 PM
โOct-13-2013 05:12 PM
jts140 wrote:
Kids getting older. Driving soon and now I am looking into a used DP for wife and I. Owned several travel trailers in the past, always had electric/propane refrigerators. As I look online I see class As with residential refrigerators. I take it will have run on batteries while not driving or plugged in.
With good batteries how long is it safe for. I know this is opened ended, but some basic answers which can help me in my search would be great.
โOct-13-2013 04:03 PM
โOct-13-2013 03:04 PM