May-19-2018 06:58 PM
May-21-2018 07:14 AM
May-21-2018 05:51 AM
Lwiddis wrote:
Two choices if you want to continue to dry camp, more batteries with a big solar system or install an RV fridge. Possibly to use only when dry camping?
May-21-2018 03:33 AM
jpjulian wrote:
The only thing running on 120v via the inverter was the fridge. The furnace was on as was the water heater on propane. An alarm went off around 3am and it was an alarm for the inverter for low dc power. I need to learn more about the systems I guess.
Joe
May-20-2018 09:50 PM
May-20-2018 09:14 PM
May-20-2018 08:12 PM
May-20-2018 07:38 PM
I got kicked at the casino, but that's beside the point. It is a 20 cu ft fridge and if I read right is supposed to draw on 5 amps. The furnace was on and water heater on propane. The inverter is dedicated exclusively to the fridge, not to the tv or any other a.c. appliance, or so we were told. The batteries should have been fully charged, if I read the panel correctly, as this was our 3rd night of use since purchase and the prior 2 were connected to 50A.
Joe
May-20-2018 07:30 PM
jpjulian wrote:That 5A would be at 120V. So about 600 watts. At 12V, that's 50 amps. Unless you have LED lighting, each fixture will likely draw 1-2 amps. The furnace is going to draw a few amps when running. Your 2 batteries are probably around 200 amp-hours. Way before the batteries are fully discharged, their voltage under load is likely going to drop below the inverter's minimum input voltage, so it will shut off. That's assuming they were fully charged to begin with, and that won't happen driving down the road or with the common WFCO converter most manufacturers use.theoldwizard1 wrote:jpjulian wrote:
Our new Mobile Suites came equipped with two 6 volt batteries and a 1000 watt inverter.
Looking at a brochure, it appears that 5er has at least a 22 cu ft side by side refrigerator with bottom freezer. Very nice but those can draw up to 20A !
I also noticed that the manufacturer offer an upgrade inverter with 4 batteries ! I hope you won big at the casino because you will be spend your winnings on this upgrade !
I got kicked at the casino, but that's beside the point. It is a 20 cu ft fridge and if I read right is supposed to draw on 5 amps. The furnace was on and water heater on propane. The inverter is dedicated exclusively to the fridge, not to the tv or any other a.c. appliance, or so we were told.
Joe
May-20-2018 06:39 PM
garyemunson wrote:
Most RVs I have seen with residential fridges use a 4 battery setup. 2 batteries are the norm for units with a gas fridge. You should not need to upgrade the charger/inverter/converter. It is obviously big enough for the 120 VAC you need and should have no problem charging a couple extra batteries. Remember, when you are dry camping, there are a lot of other electricity draws. Watch TV? Satellite receiver box, furnace fan if it's cold, smoke and CO detectors, water heater control circuit, lights, maybe more stuff. 12 hours on 2 batteries sounds about right.
May-20-2018 06:27 PM
goducks10 wrote:
If you plan on doing a lot of dry camping then having 4 6V batteries are necessary. I'd also opt for solar.
May-20-2018 06:17 PM
theoldwizard1 wrote:jpjulian wrote:
Our new Mobile Suites came equipped with two 6 volt batteries and a 1000 watt inverter.
Looking at a brochure, it appears that 5er has at least a 22 cu ft side by side refrigerator with bottom freezer. Very nice but those can draw up to 20A !
I also noticed that the manufacturer offer an upgrade inverter with 4 batteries ! I hope you won big at the casino because you will be spend your winnings on this upgrade !
May-20-2018 06:55 AM
May-20-2018 06:39 AM
May-20-2018 06:16 AM