SternWake
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I was not aware the dorm style compressor fridges say to run them level. I knew the absorption/propane/3 way fridges are not tolerant of running off level for any amount of time, and the damage is cumulative.
Norcold and Waeco, and many other 12v compressor fridges advertise 30 degrees off level operation, as many of these fridges are designed for Sailboats, which can be heeled for days on end.
I would be very interested if the fridge in the OP consumes as little as claimed. If one is going the Inverter/ dorm fridge route, one should find an inverter which has a standby function, so that it does not consume lots of battery power just being turned on waiting for the fridge's compressor to kick back on. This function will likely eat into the savings by going for a residential fridge, and without it battery consumption will increase to some degree, requiring more electrical storage and more recharge capacity, also eating into that initial savings.
My Coleman 800 watt inverter draws 0.9 amp hours per hour just turned on powering nothing.
My Vitrifrigo c51is consumes less than that 85% of the time.
I would really be interested in seeing some measuring devices on this Sear's fridge, like a Clamp on Ammeter during start up or Shunted ammeter, or even A 'watt's up' type meter on the Inverter, or perhaps a Kill a watt meter on the AC power cord. I'd also like to know how much Noise they make. My old Norcold was a Buzzsaw in comparison to my Vitrifrigo. It reduced the quality of sleep, and many times I would climb out of bed and start punching the door in frustration at all the harmonics it would develop, which woke me up in the first place.
If you are sensitive to noises during sleep or at the edge of falling asleep I would take the possible noise factor into account, almost more so than battery consumption.
Here is my meter plugged into my 2.8 cubic foot fridge fridge: The current tapers from 2.7 right after compressor start up down to about 2.2 amps at the end of the cycle.
I've taken many steps to ensure maximum efficiency of my fridge, including more insulation, and better airflow across condenser and compressor so that it cannot recycle any preheated air. It does not need these modifications, the compressor on my fridge could power a fridge 3x the size at max rpm, however I did it for maximum lifespan and minimal battery draw, and I am thoroughly impressed with its performance.
Norcold and Waeco, and many other 12v compressor fridges advertise 30 degrees off level operation, as many of these fridges are designed for Sailboats, which can be heeled for days on end.
I would be very interested if the fridge in the OP consumes as little as claimed. If one is going the Inverter/ dorm fridge route, one should find an inverter which has a standby function, so that it does not consume lots of battery power just being turned on waiting for the fridge's compressor to kick back on. This function will likely eat into the savings by going for a residential fridge, and without it battery consumption will increase to some degree, requiring more electrical storage and more recharge capacity, also eating into that initial savings.
My Coleman 800 watt inverter draws 0.9 amp hours per hour just turned on powering nothing.
My Vitrifrigo c51is consumes less than that 85% of the time.
I would really be interested in seeing some measuring devices on this Sear's fridge, like a Clamp on Ammeter during start up or Shunted ammeter, or even A 'watt's up' type meter on the Inverter, or perhaps a Kill a watt meter on the AC power cord. I'd also like to know how much Noise they make. My old Norcold was a Buzzsaw in comparison to my Vitrifrigo. It reduced the quality of sleep, and many times I would climb out of bed and start punching the door in frustration at all the harmonics it would develop, which woke me up in the first place.
If you are sensitive to noises during sleep or at the edge of falling asleep I would take the possible noise factor into account, almost more so than battery consumption.
Here is my meter plugged into my 2.8 cubic foot fridge fridge: The current tapers from 2.7 right after compressor start up down to about 2.2 amps at the end of the cycle.
I've taken many steps to ensure maximum efficiency of my fridge, including more insulation, and better airflow across condenser and compressor so that it cannot recycle any preheated air. It does not need these modifications, the compressor on my fridge could power a fridge 3x the size at max rpm, however I did it for maximum lifespan and minimal battery draw, and I am thoroughly impressed with its performance.