akrvbob said:CamperVan-Man, I'm curious about kerosene fridge/freezers and did a Google search on them and couldn't find one for less than $1900. Can you find us a link to some small ones we could afford? I'd love to see it!
Where did you get yours and how much did you pay. Have you ever seen them in a store somewhere? If so where? I'd probably try one out if you can send me a link.
Thanks! Bob
Greetings Bob!
I actually got mine free, out of an abandoned boat in the middle of the desert. That's where my 12v AC and my original kerosene double burner cook stove came from too, along with a "Fire Coil" used to heat water.
Most of the off grid homesteaders got theirs from St. Paul Mercantile I think. Not sure on the prices, and most of theirs are big ones, much bigger than mine. One fellow even has a kerosene powered 8 foot chest freezer.
For our size, I'd check out the boat salvage places, since they seemed to be pretty common on older boats. Not sure about the prices... Mine says it was patented in 1912-1926. It says it's an Electrolux.
Do you ever get down towards Slab City? Last November, I salvaged one just like mine from their dump, for a friend, and there was another one that I saw in an abandoned bus too. Under counter size, free for the taking. My guess is that nobody wanted it since it says kerosene on it. Probably been there for years. The one I got from the dump seems to be a little harder to adjust than mine, seems like it would prefer to be a total freezer, even in just pilot light mode. In doing a search I found some manuals, so maybe I can tweak it.
On searching CL, I found about 20, all over the country, the closest to you was one in Sacramento for $40, a 1936 model. White, no teak cabinet.
I found a site that said many millions were made... A couple of sites said they'd run on gas/propane/kerosene/diesel ... Not quite sure what to make of that... Run on all, or different models for each... Or???
Maybe check used appliance stores? Or antique stores? Flea Markets?
A couple of years back I caught a gigantic Flea Market right beside I-10 in Quartzite, just about this time of year I think, and there was a guy there that had a bunch of them in the $200 range. Maybe a regular there...
When doing hurricane relief work, I discovered lots of them in use as backups in hurricane alley for when the power was out. Mainly house sized ones though. They've kept their old floor standing kerosene kitchen stoves/ovens too, and OLD kerosene heaters. Some of those old timers are a lot smarter than what people give them credit for. They're the ORIGINAL survivalists!
At $2k for new ones, I guess someone thinks they're pretty valuable...
I wonder how that compares to similar gas or electric ones...
Cheers!
The CamperVan_Man