I’m glad these old topics stay open now, instead of closing after a year of inactivity. I don’t know if that’s intentional, or just another “feature” of our vintage forum platform, but I like it. It gives me an opportunity to update this saga, and let you know how things have worked out over time.
Just to recap, when I opened this, I was installing a Redarc 25 amp DC-DC charger. I chose the 25 amp model because it’s price was about all I could stomach then. I think it was about $360 at the time, and the next larger model (40 amp) was about $80 more. My intended use was to support running the fridge in AC mode from an inverter while driving. The fridge pulls about 28 amps when the AC heating element is on, but it’s not on all the time. I would manage the power deficit by keeping the fridge set on one of its lower numeric thermostat settings.
That worked pretty much as planned. The fridge was staying cold enough, and the camper battery was staying charged enough. Then on a whim, I decided I’d try it on DC mode. I had given up on using that mode several years back because it just couldn’t keep up with even mild ambients without letting the fridge warm up to unsafe temperatures. I had pulled the fuse for the DC heater so I wouldn’t accidentally set it on DC and run the battery down.
I put the fuse back in, and set the Fridge to DC mode. We were on a trip out west, and were driving between Tucson and Joshua Tree NP. I remember the high that day was 113°. I have a wireless thermometer in the fridge to monitor the temperature from the truck cab, and to my surprise the fridge was able to keep up just fine.
After puzzling over this for a while, I concluded the Redarc charger was keeping the voltage in the camper to a much higher level than when I just had the larger gauge wires from the truck. The DC heating element was apparently putting more btu’s into the fridge cooling unit than it used to, making it work better. Not as good as the AC element, but MUCH better than it used to work. This was good news, because the DC heating element only pulls 18-19 amps, which turned my charging power deficit into a surplus. Whoohoo!
That worked great for several trips, but I eventually started noticing some intermittent cooling issues in DC mode where it seemed to not be able to keep up for a while, then it would start working normally again. Then on the last day of a trip a few months ago, it clearly wasn’t cooling at all in DC mode. I switched it back to AC mode for the remainder of the trip.
Once we got home and I had time to do some troubleshooting, I very quickly found that the DC fuse had gotten hot enough to melt its plastic covering, and scorch the Dinosaur control board around the fuse connectors. The fuse wasn’t blown however. After pulling the fuse and reinstalling it, the DC element started working again. I decided then that I need to go back to AC mode on the fridge, but I don’t want to have a power deficit any longer. I bought a portable compressor fridge almost a year ago, and want to be able to bring that along on some of our trips when it’s needed. It can also run in AC or DC mode, and DC mode is the most power efficient.
Fortunately, when I installed the 25 amp charger I upsized the wire gauge to 4 from the 6 AWG that was recommended. Upgrading to the 40 amp Redarc and some new fuses was a plug-and-play install, and I sold the 25 amp unit on eBay. The new unit also has a solar input, and I’m still planning on adding a roof mounted panel someday.
We just returned from another trip of about a week and a half, and the Redarc performed flawlessly. The weather was poor-to-awful the entire time. We were under a winter storm system in Texas and Oklahoma that would have rendered a roof solar panel of little use. The best weather we had most of the time was gray and overcast. We had rain, sleet, and snow on some days. I think think the last two days were the first sun we had. We drove about 2200 miles during that time though, arriving at our overnight stops after dark most days. The camper battery was always very close to fully charged when we stoped. If I remembered to switch on our 12v mattress heating pad a few hours before we stopped, our bed would even be warm.
We were out 10 nights, and the coldest night we had was mid-teens. We had 15 amp power 4 of those nights, and we used an entire 30 lb cylinder of propane for the trip. I used the built-in 3600 watt generator for the microwave only, and never had to get out my Yamaha 1000 gen.
This is pretty typical for the majority of our trips, where there is a mixture of work and play.
:):)
2001 Lance 1121 on a 2016 F450 ‘Scuse me while I whinge.
And for all you Scooby-Doo and Yosemite Sam types………..Let’s Go Brandon!!!