Cool, thanks for posting those.<br><br>Interesting condenser set up. Also the metal encased electronic controller. I think they made the metal cased units to reduce radio interference on boats. Another trick is to twist the power leads.<br><br>Don't know if you got instructions with the unit:<br>
http://www.ra.danfoss.com/Technical...f_electronic_unit_ac-dc_04-2009_ei100g402.pdf<br><br>
http://www.ra.danfoss.com/Technical...nit_101n0600_12-24vdc_08-2011_dehc100m602.pdf<br><br><br><br><br>I am not seeing the 120v inputs on the controller. Is this a DC only model?<br><br>For reference, this is how my cooling unit came set up. The condenser looks more like a car radiator.<br><br>
<br><br>My cabinet is a tight fit with the extra insulation. I was afraid the pipes were in danger of installation and removal stress so I took the stainless steel door face from my failed Norcold, and made a cooling unit cover to protect it, and funnel the fan's flow across the compressor and controller.<br><br>Here is the fridge encased in 3/4" or more insulation all around, with the new Noctua fan pushing air through the condenser and through the tunnel.<br>
<br><br>I riveted some angle aluminum to the stainless tunnel to keep it from being pushed inward. It is held on with tape.<br><br>
<br><br>Missing from this picture is the foam board separator which seals the fridge section of the cabinet.<br>
<br><br>My single pass condenser fan system, pulls air from the floor under the fridge and exhausts it out a louvered vent behind the fridge.<br>
<br><br>It pulls some serious air from the floor:<br>
<br><br><br>When It was in the low thirties a week or 2 ago, when the fan and compressor would kick on, I'd feel cold air getting sucked in past my less than perfect door seals as it pushed air out the louvered vent.<br><br>So I cut a hole in the foam board partition to allow the condenser fan air enter the electrical portion of my cabinet instead of exhausting it outside the van. I also cut a hole in other partition of the cabinet and put a small fan in it to exhaust both partitions of condenser heated air, but also the electrical cabinet, which can generate some heat on its own.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>