Forum Discussion
BFL13
Jan 25, 2019Explorer II
So the results are in--the 12v worked overnight, but did not keep the freezer cold.
Yesterday I had the freezer down to - 20C on gas and switched over to 12v. (The freezer gets colder than that when camping--don't know what the deal is here--perhaps the fridge needs to be in a heated space like with a res fridge?)
12v did not come on right away and temp started back up. Left it, and this morning after 13 hours, the Kill-A-Watt is showing that the 12v heating element is drawing power at approx. 135w as per 13.6v from earlier testing.
Freezer temp is now +3C near ambient, so despite whatever the 12v has done, it was not enough. Even if it all did work better if the fridge were in a warmer place, the scenario for day-before-camping use would be with the RV furnace off, the rig at ambient.
So that was a bust. Probably why they don't even bother with 12v in newer RV fridges.
Yesterday I had the freezer down to - 20C on gas and switched over to 12v. (The freezer gets colder than that when camping--don't know what the deal is here--perhaps the fridge needs to be in a heated space like with a res fridge?)
12v did not come on right away and temp started back up. Left it, and this morning after 13 hours, the Kill-A-Watt is showing that the 12v heating element is drawing power at approx. 135w as per 13.6v from earlier testing.
Freezer temp is now +3C near ambient, so despite whatever the 12v has done, it was not enough. Even if it all did work better if the fridge were in a warmer place, the scenario for day-before-camping use would be with the RV furnace off, the rig at ambient.
So that was a bust. Probably why they don't even bother with 12v in newer RV fridges.
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