โJun-14-2018 01:30 PM
โJun-16-2018 06:25 AM
โJun-14-2018 09:07 PM
westend wrote:
I have one of these small 120V fridges, too. Mine works well. It is some Asian brand bought from Target. A lot of these small 120V dorm fridges have the cooling coils in the wall sections rather than the rear like a typical 120V fridge. Make sure you have some ventilation around the outside of the fridge. If you do have adequate ventilation, it may be time for a replacement. A fridge full of food and frozen stuff can have more value in the food than the cost of a replacement.
If you have a big budget, the small 12V compressor freezers and fridges are easy to power and are built better than their 120V counterparts.
โJun-14-2018 07:32 PM
โJun-14-2018 03:47 PM
โJun-14-2018 03:41 PM
carringb wrote:TexasBorn wrote:
It's a 100*+ outside so I bet its 120*-130* in the trailer.
Small compressor fridges seem to max out around a 50F temp reduction from ambient.
โJun-14-2018 03:38 PM
TexasBorn wrote:
It's a 100*+ outside so I bet its 120*-130* in the trailer.
โJun-14-2018 03:30 PM
โJun-14-2018 02:23 PM
โJun-14-2018 02:20 PM
TexasBorn wrote:
Thanks for the reply. It's in my 77 cavalier tt. We are restoring it. The trailer came with the dorm room size compressor driven ac powered fridge. I run it at home under shore power and generator power when boondocking.
โJun-14-2018 02:20 PM
โJun-14-2018 02:12 PM
โJun-14-2018 02:02 PM
โJun-14-2018 01:54 PM
โJun-14-2018 01:39 PM