A 5 year old battery which has not been used much, does not mean it will perform like a new battery. They have shelf lives and yours is near the end of it. Capacity loss is occurring from the moment the acid is poured to cover the plates in the factory.<br><br>Inverters need to be wired close to the battery over thick cabling. Use AC extension cords to power AC items rather than moving the inverter nearer the appliance being powered. Much less voltage drop on AC wiring<br><br>The alternator does not really do a good job charging distant house batteries, unless steps have been taken to shorten and thicken the circuit. The last 20% of charge to reach a true 100% takes hours and hours and hours regardless of charging source. Most think 85% is full or they read surface charge after engine shutdown and assume incorrectly the battery is full<br><br>On another forum, a member had to get a 1200 watt/2400 surge inverter to power his 2.2 cubic foot Dorm fridge. His new group 31 battery could not power it through a full weekend with the inverter alarm starting Saturday evening after leaving Friday afternoon and driving 3 hours.<br><br>He assumed that the battery would fully recharge on his 3 hour drive home, because like most, he thought the alternator was some magical, near instant, battery recharger. Naturally the battery got blamed a month later when it could barely power his stereo in camp for a few hours while he was taking beers from his cooler.<br><br>Then realizing his battery was sulfated from chronic undercharging, went out and bought a "desulfating" battery charger and performed several reconditioning cycles on it. Then declared the charger a waste of money after it didn't magically restore to new his abused battery.<br><br>So in his bid to save money with a dorm fridge, he spent an additional 120 on inverters, another 110 on a charger, 50 dollars in thicker cabling in between battery and alternator and he is stuck with a battery will little capacity remaining, a charger he didn't need, a larger inverter than he will ever need, and a fridge which is basically useless unless plugged into the grid.<br><br><br><br>Dry ice in an enclosed space can be dangerous as Co2 will displace oxygen from the floor up.