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Residential Refrigerators While Boondocking

AtlantaGuy
Explorer II
Explorer II
I'm new to the world of having a residential refrigerator in my RV. Does anyone have any tips on how to get the most out of a residential unit when mostly boondocking?

Thanks.
2011 Winnebago View 24K
2013 Honda Fit
16 REPLIES 16

westend
Explorer
Explorer
smkettner wrote:
+1 for batteries and solar :B
+2 :B
'03 F-250 4x4 CC
'71 Starcraft Wanderstar -- The Cowboy/Hilton

bmupton
Explorer
Explorer
bob_nestor wrote:
mlts22 wrote:
My dream:

Residential refrigerator + decent PSW inverter + decent battery bank + this.

Functionally identical to an absorption refrigerator except that the fuel cell keeps the house jars topped off, my beer gets cold fast, and I don't have to perfectly level my rig.


The specs say that fuel cell consumes 100 g/h which I assume is gallons per hour! I hope that's a misprint or your dream RV is a tanker truck.


I'm guessing g is 'grams' not 'gallons' since gasses of this nature are usually measured by weight, not volume.
TT: 2013 Zinger ZT33BH
TV: 1986 6.2 Diesel Chev 3/4 ton van

bob_nestor
Explorer III
Explorer III
mlts22 wrote:
My dream:

Residential refrigerator + decent PSW inverter + decent battery bank + this.

Functionally identical to an absorption refrigerator except that the fuel cell keeps the house jars topped off, my beer gets cold fast, and I don't have to perfectly level my rig.


The specs say that fuel cell consumes 100 g/h which I assume is gallons per hour! I hope that's a misprint or your dream RV is a tanker truck.

malibuskier
Explorer
Explorer
Just be smart about which refrigerator you pick. I have a Samsung that only pulls 5 amps (26cf French door model). Compared to other brands that pull 10 - 12 amps. They add up quick....

mlts22
Explorer
Explorer
My dream:

Residential refrigerator + decent PSW inverter + decent battery bank + this.

Functionally identical to an absorption refrigerator except that the fuel cell keeps the house jars topped off, my beer gets cold fast, and I don't have to perfectly level my rig.

dkreuzen
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 2012 Monaco Knight 36PFT Diesel Pusher which should be identical to the OP's 2013. It has a 2800 watt Magnum inverter and 3 stage charger, 4 L16 6v batteries (about twice the size of a normal 6v), and generator auto-start.

The refrigerator will run off the batteries for about 24 hours depending on how hot it is and other loads. I have dry camped once for 4 days, and it was hot (100 degrees). With our normal running of the generator for an hour or so in the morning and evening to cook meals we had no issues keeping the batteries charged and the refrigerator running.
Dennis
2012 Monaco Knight 36PFT
2019 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland
2005 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon on 2007 16' Car Trailer

harold1946
Explorer
Explorer
If not allready equiped with one, I would add an AGS (automatic generator start).
Harold and Linda
2009 CT Coachworks siena 35V
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John___Angela
Explorer
Explorer
MrWizard wrote:
2013 Monaco Knight 36PFT Diesel Pusher


you have plenty of generator about 7~10kw quiet diesel
i'll guess on the inverter setup and say (2) 2000w victron's in a paired setup

6 maybe 8 batteries

all you have to do is remember to run the generator during the appropriate hours so your batteries stay charged up

if you need A/C you need to run the generator


Hmmm, although all valid I think his unit is already equipted with the inverter needed to run the fridge which is I assume factory. I'm guessing that they are not using victrons and it is probably a Xantrex or magnum 2000. More than adequate for all coach needs. Victrons are nice products though.
2003 Revolution 40C Class A. Electric smart car as a Toad on a smart car trailer
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take but rather by the moments that take our breath away.

MrWizard
Moderator
Moderator
2013 Monaco Knight 36PFT Diesel Pusher


you have plenty of generator about 7~10kw quiet diesel
i'll guess on the inverter setup and say (2) 2000w victron's in a paired setup

6 maybe 8 batteries

all you have to do is remember to run the generator during the appropriate hours so your batteries stay charged up

if you need A/C you need to run the generator
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time2roll
Nomad
Nomad

John___Angela
Explorer
Explorer
naturist wrote:
The possibility of going boondocking would be WHY RVs typically come with absorption (ie, gas) refrigerators, not residential ones.

A residential fridge is going to draw a lot of power, particularly when the compressor starts. This will require a rather largish inverter, which will suck down batteries pretty fast. No doubt you've discovered that already.

The number one suggestion I'd have is to avoid opening the fridge up for any reason while boon docking. Open door time is the major warm-up factor in a fridge's day.


Well certainly many RV's come with absorption fridges but its getting tough to find a middle to upper end motorhome that doesn't have a residential fridge. I would think absorptions will be available for awhile yet but certainly residentials (compressor type) are making big inroads into the RV world. With the price of solar nowadays I can't think of any real advantages to absorption units over residentials in coaches or larger fifth wheels that have room for larger battery banks.
2003 Revolution 40C Class A. Electric smart car as a Toad on a smart car trailer
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take but rather by the moments that take our breath away.

John___Angela
Explorer
Explorer
I believe your coach is already set up with 4 X 6 volt batteries. More is better but 4 will do. Now add about 400 watts of solar and for the most part you are set. We still occasionally run the genny during hi current usage like microwave or toaster but for the most part the solar will more than run your fridge and a bunch of other things. If we do start the genny for the microwave or toaster or whatever we usually let it run for an hour. Good for the genny and rapid charges the battery bank. Your residential doesn't use that much power. We have a large battery bank and lots of solar but we dry camp a lot and the residential hasn't made much of a difference in how we camp unless we have LOTS of cloudy skys. Then we end up running the genny a couple hours a day. No big deal. Your resdiential will draw just over an amp or so, and only for about 20 minutes out of the hour.
2003 Revolution 40C Class A. Electric smart car as a Toad on a smart car trailer
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take but rather by the moments that take our breath away.

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
Boondocking and residential fridge

LARGE battery bank.......LARGE inverter......BIG Generator to either run fridge and/or charge battery bank

Folks that change out an absorption fridge to a residential fridge typically go to CG's with FHUs.
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qtla9111
Nomad
Nomad
Batteries and solar.
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