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Larry wrote:
Does someone make a 12VDC compressor? I've never seen one, here. You're pretty much admitting that you've never seen a custom marine refrigeration system and know nothing about them. Most of the small boat systems in the last 20 years have used DC Danfoss hermetic compressors. The larger systems use a belt or direct drive from a DC motor. I do see AC inverters built into fridges driving standard AC-powered compressors that have relays or electronics to switch to shore power if shore power is available to run the compressor straight off shore power, however. Perhaps the AC/DC units on powerboats do it this way. Inversion and synthsized AC power creation from battery power is now in the range of 98-99% efficient with switching power supply technology using pulse-width-modulation to accomplish a near-perfect sinewave output to drive loads. These powerful synthesizers are very cheaply constructed and very profitable. It can be done, but if you buy a general purpose inverter it will likely run at about 80%, The AC compressors synchronize to power line frequency (50 or 60 Hz), which gives them a steady power output regardless of condensor pressure loading which would drive a DC motor crazy trying to maintain counter EMF. It makes little difference in efficiency running a switching inverter outside......or building one inside for another $1500 to sell at the boat store. The price difference is phenomenal! OK, I just checked the energy efficiency of a GE compact fridge, 5.7 feet with a tiny freezer. It uses 360 kWh's a year, or 1 kWh per day. Supplying this with an inverter would take over 100 AmpHours. However, a similar sized fridge built with a small Danfoss will only use about 35 Amp-hours. My system includes this size fridge (bigger, actually), plus a 5 foot deep freeze which keeps a summer's worth of burgers and steaks at about 5 degrees only uses 55-60 AmpHours in New England, maybe 75-80 in the tropics. (Mine is a belt driven 12V compressor with holding plates and water cooling. In the tropics, if I had to do it over, I'd be considering two small Danfoss air-cooled systems, one for the fridge, the other for the freezer.) I'm a fan of faster charging, either with a high output alternator or a Honda 2000i pushing a 100 Amp charger - either way I can do most of my charging at 75-95 Amps, even though its only a 440 AH bank. But still, adding 65 AH a day to save some money doesn't work, even assuming the GE fridge would fit in a boat. Frankly the cost is irrelavent; there's no way I would double my charging time to have less capacity. Since you're claiming you can't charge at over 25 Amps, running the commercial fridge would take an extra 2 and a half hours, and a system like mine would require even more hours. Of course, you're saying that a marine fridge *could be* built for on a few dollars more than a commercial unit. Possibly true, but the market is tiny by comparison, and that's what its all about. |
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