Muk said:Send a photo of your fridge doofie cheers Muk.
There is a link back at the start of the thread.
Cheers
Doug
Muk said:Send a photo of your fridge doofie cheers Muk.
Ded Driver said:going full circle back to the original post about the Deltacron battery/solar run fridge, I was keen on the idea & contemplating if it would be worth getting one sent over, but I have since found that with an extension cord from my Aux battery, & the additional fold-out solar mat, so 2 panels keeping the battery topped up, that I have my needs covered.
yeah I did a bit of a background check too, & like what they are doing. :Y:Ward69 said:Ded Driver said:going full circle back to the original post about the Deltacron battery/solar run fridge, I was keen on the idea & contemplating if it would be worth getting one sent over, but I have since found that with an extension cord from my Aux battery, & the additional fold-out solar mat, so 2 panels keeping the battery topped up, that I have my needs covered.
DD You have just made my day, did research on this company, Great ideas on what young engineers are trying to do
His last visit was yesterday.madtuna said:Speaking of fridges...has anyone heard from Ridge Runner lately?
I hope pommyland wasnt hit by some sort of earth tremor and hes been buried under a pile of fridges, thermoses, tyre pumps, tyre gauges and winches.
condor22 said:To be fair RR - what is the ambient temp? As I've mentioned before, on a 20C day and probably more in the 4x4, my fridge uses an average of 1AH per hour. At 40C it's pretty well on all the time at 3AH. I've also noted that when it's winter in Vic and night temps are near zero it doesn't run at all.
It's all relative, so, ambient affects current draw, as does, is there anything in the fridge acting as a heatsink?
Given the max temp in London today is only 7C, your figures might well be expected, but won't be relevant to Aussie summers.
Ded Driver said:RR, I watched an article on a current affair tv program a while ago about food poisoning from refrigerated food, & an issue with domestic upright fridges.
Especially with a family of children holding the door open, every time you open the fridge the cold air sinks/falls out, literally, & is replaced with room temperature air.
If the fridge is opened lots during the day (common in summer), then the air in the fridge hovers around an average just below room temp, but well above the 5deg or so minimum that it should be, thus allowing food to go off.
In comparison, a car fridge is a chest style that keeps most of the cold air in when it is opened.