Many have gone "residential" for replacement fridges. Some call them "party" or "dorm" or "apartment" fridges since the "family size" most of us would want at home are too big for most RV installations.
MANY advantages. RES fridges are getting better and small ones are coming out in many dimensions at falling prices. RV fridges are getting more expensive and their durability (the cooling unit with the ammonia, hydrogen and powder) hasn't improved a lick. RV fridge might burn your coach down and RES probably won't.
IF Your Friend's Personal Style in RVing is to go from home where there's AC power to cool a RES fridge, To and From Hookup Sites, then by all means go RES. They can keep food cold over a travel day. Just pack a cooler for the trip so the fridge isn't opened till it's running again. It'll cool back down faster than an RV fridge.
Part of the value of an RV to us is that it can run stand-alone. We have the potential of storm evacuations so we value the ability of our fridge to run awhile on LPG.
The RES fridge fans haven't talked about is re-sale appeal or price. Used RV's seem to be a Buyer's Market. Shoppers can easily reject an RV with Old Tires, Poor Fridge, etc. etc. That stuff seems to make an RV easier to sell, but maybe not at a higher price.
If God's Your Co-Pilot Move Over, jd
2003 Jayco Escapade 31A on 2002 Ford E450 V10 4R100 218" WB