YKatBalouE350 said:
Almost There, i was considering just a freezer for ice for an ice chest in hot months. So with that in mind do you still think I should have more than 100ah battery for it and the Maxxfan and other things I listed in first post? As far as a solenoid I drive about 5 minutes a day. Gens are probably not an option for me, at least not going solo (to hard to maneuver). What about a car jump portable system? Is that a possible charging option?
Using any size of an freezer unit solely for the purpose of freezing ice to put in a cooler is, IMO, the absolute worst way to think about a system.
First, using ice to keep food cold allows temperatures to vary which is not good for your food handling safety. You're also taking a risk of drowning food in the melting water although that can be handled somewhat by using plastic containers to hold the ice.
Keeping things frozen and getting water to the freezing point are two entirely separate power usages. The harder the freezer has to work, the more power it consumes.
If all you're doing is trying to keep food cold then just set the 12v compressor unit at 40F and be done with it....no need to freeze ice to then use in a cooler.
A 100 ah battery only gives you 50 ah to use before you bring it down to 50% (critical level if you want the battery to last). Personally, I wouldn't try to run anything more than light use of the fan and charging laptop/cell phone off of 100 ah unless you have an absolutely certain way of recharging the battery to full each and every day - enough solar (and light), a generator, shore power hookup or several hours of driving.
Generators don't have to be heavy. Each of my two only weigh in at 27 lbs each (Honda 1000s. I use two because I have a large system to power and am unable to lift the 2000 watt version that weighs around 45 lbs. For a smaller system to just run your stuff and a fridge, one generator would suffice.
5 minutes a day of driving barely keeps your engine battery charged (if it even does that) and won't come close to recharging a house system of any size.
A car jump portable system is nothing more than a small battery in a plastic container with some fancy outlets built in and a pair of jumper cables. It is not a source of power in and of itself. You still have to charge it somewhere any time you take power from it.