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Residential refrigerator yeah.

nbargolf
Explorer
Explorer
After band aiding a norcold 1210 frig for several months we made the move to a Samsung 18 cu ft vs the 12 cu ft old one. you may ask the cost well it was less than putting a new cooling unit on the old frig, a no brainer. If your around the St Augustine, FL area Ocean Grove RV on Hwy 1 south of the city did a great job. It took them only 5-6 hours, one day in and out. We love it. :C
40 REPLIES 40

Executive45
Explorer III
Explorer III
rjxj wrote:
/snip/

By the way, how much calculating did you do to figure out that you could run a residential on shore power or annoy people by running it for a week while on generator. /snip/


Not too many people on BLM land at Quartzsite care when you run your genset...just sayin....:W.....Dennis
We can do more than we think we can, but most do less than we think we do
Dennis and Debi Fourteen Years Full Timing
Monaco Executive M-45PBQ Quad Slide
525HP Cummins ISM 6 Spd Allison
2014 Chevrolet Equinox LTZ W/ ReadyBrute
CLICK HERE TO VIEW OUR TRAVEL BLOG

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi,

You do not know what make, model, or size of the converter, so you can not state a run time for the recharge via generator.

Personally, I'd opt to add some solar panels with a decent controller.

dahkota wrote:
Because people typically drive for 4-6 hours and then park for about 72+ hours. The coach would need to be plugged in or the generator would need to be run fairly often. If the fridge uses 150A per day, the generator will need to be run at least 4 hours a day just to keep up, if parked in a dry camping situation.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

azrving
Explorer
Explorer
Executive wrote:
rjxj wrote:
/snip/ but I'm guessing /snip/


THIS ^^^ says it all....:S

Unless and/or until you do your research, don't guess.

That said, we don't boondock very much but we've enjoyed up to a week without external power. We run the genset in the morning while making breakfast and in the evening while watching TV. We've had ours for over a year now and wouldn't go back to a Notsocold ever again.

For those thinking of changing over, HERE are pictures of my installation. I did it myself, in a campground. Took me two days and several trips to the local Home Depot, but it was well worth it....Dennis


By the way, how much calculating did you do to figure out that you could run a residential on shore power or annoy people by running it for a week while on generator. What did you have to figure out or guesstimate? Oh you had to use a tape measure. Got it. 🙂

azrving
Explorer
Explorer
Executive wrote:
rjxj wrote:
/snip/ but I'm guessing /snip/


THIS ^^^ says it all....:S

Unless and/or until you do your research, don't guess.

That said, we don't boondock very much but we've enjoyed up to a week without external power. We run the genset in the morning while making breakfast and in the evening while watching TV. We've had ours for over a year now and wouldn't go back to a Notsocold ever again.

For those thinking of changing over, HERE are pictures of my installation. I did it myself, in a campground. Took me two days and several trips to the local Home Depot, but it was well worth it....Dennis


That's exactly why I said it that way. I dont know which frig would fit in my rig. I haven't had a problem with my frig yet so I dont know what frig or how many amp hours it would draw. That's why a person will use a general guess or guesstimate as some call it. It's just general discussion, not final calculations to make a purchase. It's just a rough comparison. A 21 foot frig wont fit in my FW so to make quick general comparisons I can just guess that on top of my solar I would need about 2 hours of generator run time too. Is that easier or simple for you to understand?

Executive45
Explorer III
Explorer III
rjxj wrote:
/snip/ but I'm guessing /snip/


THIS ^^^ says it all....:S

Unless and/or until you do your research, don't guess.

That said, we don't boondock very much but we've enjoyed up to a week without external power. We run the genset in the morning while making breakfast and in the evening while watching TV. We've had ours for over a year now and wouldn't go back to a Notsocold ever again.

For those thinking of changing over, HERE are pictures of my installation. I did it myself, in a campground. Took me two days and several trips to the local Home Depot, but it was well worth it....Dennis
We can do more than we think we can, but most do less than we think we do
Dennis and Debi Fourteen Years Full Timing
Monaco Executive M-45PBQ Quad Slide
525HP Cummins ISM 6 Spd Allison
2014 Chevrolet Equinox LTZ W/ ReadyBrute
CLICK HERE TO VIEW OUR TRAVEL BLOG

CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Explorer III
rjxj wrote:
The RV place told him it should be fine. If it's not, the generator will come on and help charge the batteries. With that statement they mean that when it's rolling down the road if the alternator doesnt keep up then the generator will come on automatically.
Just for clarification the refer draw is about 6A average and should not be a MH alternator problem. It might be a trailer problem which tend to have a more restricted TV charging capability of the house battery.
2009 Holiday Rambler 42' Scepter with ISL 400 Cummins
750 Watts Solar Morningstar MPPT 60 Controller
2014 Grand Cherokee Overland

Bob

azrving
Explorer
Explorer

Ivylog
Explorer III
Explorer III
My EnergyStar Whirpool 21 CuFt Refer has a energy guide of $44/year and 410,000 kWh/year or 1,123 W/day or 94 Amps/day. Increase the AH to 115 for the ice maker and warm days. I have four 115 AH AMG batteries dedicated for the refer... so I can go two days without recharging at 50%.

Even before switching to residential I had to run my generator 2-3 hours/day to keep my 800 AH battery bank up when boondocking as I was running an office out of the MH. Having replaced the energy hog Plasma TV with a LED and not needing to have a office I estimate that 1.5-2 hours should do it as the refer's battery bank has it's own 100 amp charger. Yes, I now have over 1200 AH of house batteries.

Here is my DIY 1200 removal and a 21 Cu Ft install. While running it uses 8 amps of DC power and I added a switch and cables so my alternator will supply the 8 amps when traveling.
This post is my opinion (free advice). It is not intended to influence anyone's judgment nor do I advocate anyone do what I propose.
Sold 04 Dynasty to our son after 14 great years.
Upgraded with a 08 HR Navigator 45’...

Goldencrazy
Explorer
Explorer
I have my first residential fridge in new coach. I understand these new ones are very energy efficient. I know at my cottage the electrical bill really dipped when I replaced one that was 15 years old.

azrving
Explorer
Explorer
I'd really like a res frig when mine fails BUT....where is that power coming from? Mine is also dinky compared to the big boys. Like I said we use all the power we want for tv's, laptops, leave the inverter on all the time etc but I'm guessing I would end up with 2 hours of generator time every day. AND that's generator time with a very quiet Honda 3000 that is in an insulated metal cabinet in the back of my truck with the noise directed away from people. Some of the loudest generators I have ever heard were in high dollar class A's. Sort of amazing for the price they pay. But you cant get a little sound out of a big machine. It's also very inefficient to run a 7,000 watt generator to do the job that solar or almost a 1,000 generator would do. On top of all that throw in a cheesy CONverter that is only putting out 13.6 and has cheesy wire voltage drop. Bad, bad, bad.

Bill_Satellite
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have had a RR in my coach from the beginning and it takes a couple of hours of generator in the morning to get the batteries back up. I don't have solar and I like to use all my appliances (even at night) so running the generator is required in the evening to cook anyway so at bedtime the batteries are again full. Not a big deal for us. These days we actually are either plugged in or driving so it's not any kind of a deal at all. We have a 90 amp alternator and the batteries maintain 13+V the entire time we are driving (generally 8 hours/day).
What I post is my 2 cents and nothing more. Please don't read anything into my post that's not there. If you disagree, that's OK.
Can't we all just get along?

Bill_Satellite
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have had a RR in my coach from the beginning and it takes a couple of hours of generator in the morning to get the batteries back up. I don't have solar and I like to use all my appliances (even at night) so running the generator is required in the evening to cook anyway so at bedtime the batteries are again full. Not a big deal for us.
What I post is my 2 cents and nothing more. Please don't read anything into my post that's not there. If you disagree, that's OK.
Can't we all just get along?

dahkota
Explorer
Explorer
ford truck guy wrote:
rjxj wrote:
So you are parked where you can plug in all the time?


Why ?? he stated that he has a 2000 watt inverter and 4 batteries ..SO it can stay on during travel... why would he need to plug it in all the time ?


Because people typically drive for 4-6 hours and then park for about 72+ hours. The coach would need to be plugged in or the generator would need to be run fairly often. If the fridge uses 150A per day, the generator will need to be run at least 4 hours a day just to keep up, if parked in a dry camping situation.
2015 Jeep Willys Wrangler
2014 Fleetwood Bounder 33C
States camped: all but Hawaii
more than 1700 days on the road

azrving
Explorer
Explorer
ford truck guy wrote:
rjxj wrote:
So you are parked where you can plug in all the time?


Why ?? he stated that he has a 2000 watt inverter and 4 batteries ..SO it can stay on during travel... why would he need to plug it in all the time ?



With this statement we have to assume some things:
"We have a 2000 watt inverter in our coach. Four 6 volt batteries. Rv place said that should be fine but just in case when traveling I set the generator to auto and when it reaches a certain level it comes on and rechanges the batteries."

The RV place told him it should be fine. If it's not, the generator will come on and help charge the batteries. With that statement they mean that when it's rolling down the road if the alternator doesnt keep up then the generator will come on automatically. That's fine but the rig isnt going to be rolling down the road all the time when the generator can come on and not bother anyone.

The rest of the time it needs to be parked somewhere. The assumption has to be that he's going to be plugged in all the time because he didn't mention solar. If he's boondocking he will be the guy who has the generator running all the time. It's very common for my 4 six volts to be down to 12.1 to 12.3 in the morning and 80 to 120 amp hours. We use a lot of power for a 40 inch led and furnace and everything else we want but I'm pretty sure we cant throw even a small residential in here and run off my 520 watts of solar. I would be back to running the Honda 3000 a couple hours a day. Just guestimates as I do consider a smaller residential myself.

So he must be plugged in all the time when he parks or he better get ready for a whole lot of generator hours.

rjxj wrote:
So you are parked where you can plug in all the time?


Why ?? he stated that he has a 2000 watt inverter and 4 batteries ..SO it can stay on during travel... why would he need to plug it in all the time ?
Me-Her-the kids
2020 Ford F350 SD 6.7
2020 Redwood 3991RD Garnet