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Refrigerator and Amps/hrs

icanon
Explorer
Explorer
Ok Ok maybe this question has been asked before but I haven't found the answers I'm looking for.

A typical RV dual power refrigerator (electric/propane) how much Amps/hours does one consume when running on only propane during a nice hot summer day (24hrs period)?

So when one flips the switch to run on propane how much power can one expect to use?

Thanks
Loving wife and 2 beautiful daughters.
Chocolate Lab, Lily
2014 Dodge Ram Laramie Hemi 5.7 with 3.92
2014 Dutchmen Kodiak 290BHSL
ProPride 3P Hitch
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C
Love my Weber Q1200
Me a Happy man on retirement!!!
30 REPLIES 30

icanon
Explorer
Explorer
2oldman wrote:
icanon wrote:
If I may continue to ask:

A) if someone requires 0.5 amp-hour what exactly does that mean for a 24 hrs period?

is the answer 12 amp-hrs?.

I gave an example above.

The answer is yes. If something draws 0.5 amps, continuously, and runs for one hour, that's 0.5 ah.


0.5 ampere drawn for 1 hour is one half amp-hour. So is 0.25 amp drawn over 2 hours. The stickler reason it's not "amp/hr" is because the "/" means "divided by". And amp-hr is not "divided by", it's multiplied.


Thanks for clearing that up.
Loving wife and 2 beautiful daughters.
Chocolate Lab, Lily
2014 Dodge Ram Laramie Hemi 5.7 with 3.92
2014 Dutchmen Kodiak 290BHSL
ProPride 3P Hitch
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C
Love my Weber Q1200
Me a Happy man on retirement!!!

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
A. Yes 12 amp-hours per day
B. Yes theoretically 24 amp-hours of storage but no one would choose to have a bank that small if they were serious about boondocking.

Look up the Peukert Laws which expresses approximately the change in capacity of rechargeable lead-acid batteries at different rates of discharge. As the rate increases, the battery's available capacity decreases, approximately according to Peukert's law.


icanon wrote:
If I may continue to ask:

A) if someone requires 0.5 amp-hour what exactly does that mean for a 24 hrs period?

is the answer 12 amp-hrs?


B) how much (amp-hrs) battery do one need to run a Refrigerator for 24 hrs?

is the answer a minimum 24 amp-hrs as we don't want to drain the battery below 50%?

Again thanks for the replies.

Btw my refrigerator is a Norcold N61X and I can't find anything in the manual or on the web.
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.

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
icanon wrote:
If I may continue to ask:

A) if someone requires 0.5 amp-hour what exactly does that mean for a 24 hrs period?

is the answer 12 amp-hrs?.

I gave an example above.

The answer is yes. If something draws 0.5 amps, continuously, and runs for one hour, that's 0.5 ah.


0.5 ampere drawn for 1 hour is one half amp-hour. So is 0.25 amp drawn over 2 hours. The stickler reason it's not "amp/hr" is because the "/" means "divided by". And amp-hr is not "divided by", it's multiplied.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
pianotuna wrote:
Hi GordonThree,

The duty cycle on the Dometic in my RV is 2:3 with the door never opened. The Norcold may be similar. That brings daily usage by just the fridge to around 40 amp-hours per day. Other folks have reported 36 amp-hours per day.

The real answer depends on the particular fridge make and model. One fellow on facebook claims 12 amp-hours per day.



I suppose 12 is possible, if the door is never opened, door seal heater off, and low ambient temperature... lots of variables.

I'll soon have individual load monitoring on my RV, for no reason in particular other than I like to have the data.
2013 KZ Sportsmen Classic 200, 20 ft TT
2020 RAM 1500, 5.7 4x4, 8 speed

icanon
Explorer
Explorer
If I may continue to ask:

A) if someone requires 0.5 amp-hour what exactly does that mean for a 24 hrs period?

is the answer 12 amp-hrs?


B) how much (amp-hrs) battery do one need to run a Refrigerator for 24 hrs?

is the answer a minimum 24 amp-hrs as we don't want to drain the battery below 50%?

Again thanks for the replies.

Btw my refrigerator is a Norcold N61X and I can't find anything in the manual or on the web.
Loving wife and 2 beautiful daughters.
Chocolate Lab, Lily
2014 Dodge Ram Laramie Hemi 5.7 with 3.92
2014 Dutchmen Kodiak 290BHSL
ProPride 3P Hitch
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C
Love my Weber Q1200
Me a Happy man on retirement!!!

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
If the control board draws 0.1 amp all the time, over one hour that's 0.1 amp-hr. Over 24 hours that's 2.4 ah.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi GordonThree,

The duty cycle on the Dometic in my RV is 2:3 with the door never opened. The Norcold may be similar. That brings daily usage by just the fridge to around 40 amp-hours per day. Other folks have reported 36 amp-hours per day.

The real answer depends on the particular fridge make and model. One fellow on facebook claims 12 amp-hours per day.

GordonThree wrote:
The instaneous draw for the propane solenoid + control board on my norcold is 2.4 amps. I've never tracked the usage over an hour or day, which would vary on how much food is in there, door openings, ambient temperature, battery voltage, etc.
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.

mbopp
Explorer
Explorer
Don't forget the power used by the door heater. On my old Dometic I could turn it off but the Atwood is hard-wired.
2017 Grand Design Imagine 2650RK
2019 F250 XLT Supercab
Just DW & me......

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
korbe wrote:
mine uses 0.30


In that case, your propane solenoid must be closed. The valve has a good size return spring on it (fail-closed), and needs a big magnet to hold it open; the draw will be a lot higher while the burner is operating.
2013 KZ Sportsmen Classic 200, 20 ft TT
2020 RAM 1500, 5.7 4x4, 8 speed

icanon
Explorer
Explorer
2oldman wrote:
icanon wrote:
Thanks for the answers. So basically not much more than 12 amps/day. Great!
12 ah..maybe.

It's amp-hours, not amps/hrs or amps/day.


Excuse my ignorance I'm trying to understand this amps hrs thing. ๐Ÿ˜ฎ ๐Ÿ™‚

If I may continue to ask:

A) if someone requires 0.5 amp-hour what exactly does that mean for a 24 hrs period?

is the answer 12 amp-hrs?


B) how much (amp-hrs) battery do one need to run a Refrigerator for 24 hrs?

is the answer a minimum 24 amp-hrs as we don't want to drain the battery below 50%?

Again thanks for the replies.
Loving wife and 2 beautiful daughters.
Chocolate Lab, Lily
2014 Dodge Ram Laramie Hemi 5.7 with 3.92
2014 Dutchmen Kodiak 290BHSL
ProPride 3P Hitch
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C
Love my Weber Q1200
Me a Happy man on retirement!!!

korbe
Explorer
Explorer
mine uses 0.30
.

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
icanon wrote:
Thanks for the answers. So basically not much more than 12 amps/day. Great!
12 ah..maybe.

It's amp-hours, not amps/hrs or amps/day.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
The instaneous draw for the propane solenoid + control board on my norcold is 2.4 amps. I've never tracked the usage over an hour or day, which would vary on how much food is in there, door openings, ambient temperature, battery voltage, etc.
2013 KZ Sportsmen Classic 200, 20 ft TT
2020 RAM 1500, 5.7 4x4, 8 speed

icanon
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for the answers. So basically not much more than 12 amps/day. Great!
Loving wife and 2 beautiful daughters.
Chocolate Lab, Lily
2014 Dodge Ram Laramie Hemi 5.7 with 3.92
2014 Dutchmen Kodiak 290BHSL
ProPride 3P Hitch
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C
Love my Weber Q1200
Me a Happy man on retirement!!!

midnightsadie
Explorer II
Explorer II
when on propane the only thing using 12v is the computer board. don,t think you could measure it.