wrcsixeight
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- Sep 14, 2012
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The Danfoss compressor's electronic controller has many male spade terminals on it. The resistor just hooks inline with the connector for the thermostat. <br>
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<br>Takes about 2 seconds to remove or return when The controller is exposed. I can reach mine from the adjacent cabinet, without pulling the fridge from its insulated cabinet. I do turn it off and disconnect the power lead before adding or removing the resistor, but have not done so since 1 week after the fridge arrived fedex.<br><br>I think about wiring up an easily accessible potentiometer to the circuit for when I do stuff the fridge with warm items and want them cold quicker. I've installed an 40mm 6.2 cfm internal fridge muffin fan. I think more than ~2800 rpm would be wasted as the cold plate is not big enough. The danfoss BD35f compressor can power a fridge 150% larger than mine if it were cranked upto 3500 rpm and mated to a bigger evaporator. <br><br>When I have a solar surplus I will crank up the fridge from 2(of 7) to 3.5. Sometimes I forget to turn it back down at night fall and find I'm adding slushy milk into my morning coffee.<br><br>When I do remember to turn at back to normal overnight, the duty cycle is then considerably less.<br>-------------<br><br>I have a Negative Buss bar right next to my fuse block. The 2 wire circuits either split above or below. The hots go to the fuse block, the grounds to the buss bar. It is really hard to make wiring look organized. A fuse block and buss bar and the proper length wiring to meet them help greatly.<br><br>I have a ~30x26 vertical wall behind my driver's seat that forms the edge of my cabinet. All my wiring runs to here for distribution. Helps that my house batteries are just below the floor, accessible through a hatch. <br><br>Some fuseblocks incorporate a negative buss bar.<br><br>Lots of neat products out there for safe low voltage dc electrical distribution.