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??? about keeping refrigerators cold
I have a large refrigerator and don't want to get rid of it since I'm
on the boat a lot, and the majority of the time at the dock. But do like to go out for a couple of days each week, and the biggest issue is the frig getting too warm unless the generator runs more than I like it to. Do they make good cold packs of some kind that can be frozen and re-frozen, and would help keep it colder without so much use of the generator? |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
No shore power at the dock?
You could fill the freezer section with "Blue Ice" bags and then take them out of the freezer and put them in the refrigerator portion when you shut down, but that won't be anywhere nearly as effective as running the compressor and evaporator. It sounds like you have an AC refrigerator, no shore power, and you're setting the boat up to run your AC generator to keep the beeer cold? Or you've got a dual voltage refrigerator and the genset is running to recharge your house bank? A little more information might get you more helpful responses. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
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??? about keeping refrigerators cold
wrote: If I can get the frig to stay cold longer, I can greatly cut down on the time that the generator has to run, the number of times it has to be started and stopped, the amount of gas it uses, the number of times it has to be re-fuled, and how much time I have to spend hearing it run. You might be able to cut down on the number of times the generator has to run, but I don't think you'll be cutting down on the about of gas it uses, # of times to re-fule, or the general efficiency. It will take that generator/refrigerator combo some specific amount of fuel and time to cool that fridge & it's contents. Adding things like freezer bricks will just mean it runs longer to cool/freeze them. Then, once cold/frozen, the refrigerator may not have to be started again. There is, I'm told, some efficiency advantage to having more items (mass) in the refrigerator. I believe that's because they will accept & hold the cold better than air will. The other line of thought here is...can you make the refrigerator more efficient by adding insulation around it. You probably don't have room for that on a boat, but it's a thought. Another idea: if that unit is old and/or not keeping it's cool maybe a new unit will be more efficient at generating & keeping cool Obvious but...the less times you open the door.... Good luck. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
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??? about keeping refrigerators cold
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??? about keeping refrigerators cold
Joe Parsons wrote:
I'm confused. If you're connected to shore power, why would your generator ever have to kick on? Do you not have some sort of battery tender? I think what he's saying is that it's connected to shore power while he's at the dock, and that's fine. But when he takes it out on the water for a couple of days, he has to use a generator to power it, since it's AC only. It seems to me that blue ice would do the trick. It would get thoroughly frozen while at the dock (with shore power) and then the fridge would just act like an ice box while out on the water. If he was out long enough that the blue ice all melted and he needed to power the fridge again, he'd have a choice: Leaving the blue ice in the fridge would mean it would take longer (more fuel) for the generator-powered fridge to refreeze everything, but he could go longer before having to power up the generator again. Taking the melted blue ice out of the fridge would make cooling the contents easier (more efficient), but he'd have to do it again sooner. Of course, if he has enough blue ice, and he's only disconnected from the dock for a couple of days at a time, he may never have to fire up the generator. More insulation would help, too. Shawn. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
Just curious... are propane refridgerators legal on boats? We use them in
outposts in Canada every year and they work very well. I never see them in the US. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
I have the same situation & I use an inverter that keeps the fridge cold for
hours - then I run the generator to charge the batteries. Works great for me. wrote in message ... I have a large refrigerator and don't want to get rid of it since I'm on the boat a lot, and the majority of the time at the dock. But do like to go out for a couple of days each week, and the biggest issue is the frig getting too warm unless the generator runs more than I like it to. Do they make good cold packs of some kind that can be frozen and re-frozen, and would help keep it colder without so much use of the generator? |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
The way that this problem is normally solved is by adding a standard
icebox 12 volt conversion unit in the existing refrigerator. There are several manufacturers that have thin plate evaporator coils that will fit the rear wall of existing refrigerators. In the new Boat Works magazine there is a article of a similar conversion to a 110 volt refrigerator. Storing energy in cold packs will not cool the box to refrigerator temperatures. From the author of four books on boat refrigeration For a slide show on boat refrigeration go to; http://www.kollmann-marine.com obull (CCred68046) wrote in message ... Just curious... are propane refridgerators legal on boats? We use them in outposts in Canada every year and they work very well. I never see them in the US. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
wrote in message . ..
On 14 Jul 2004 15:45:54 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote: No shore power at the dock? Yes there is shore power, and since I'm there the majority of the time don't want to get rid of the nice big frig because it's so convenient. You could fill the freezer section with "Blue Ice" bags That sounds like the type of thing I'm hoping to learn more about. If you'd care to tell me a bit more I'd appreciate it. Meanwhile I'll see what Google has to offer. and then take them out of the freezer and put them in the refrigerator portion when you shut down, but that won't be anywhere nearly as effective as running the compressor and evaporator. It sounds like you have an AC refrigerator, no shore power, It's an AC refrigerator, and AC shore power the majority of the time. and you're setting the boat up to run your AC generator to keep the beeer cold? If it was just beer I'd only have to fool with an ice chest. But it's beer plus everything else...including frozen food that I'd like to keep as well frozen as possible. Or you've got a dual voltage refrigerator and the genset is running to recharge your house bank? If I can get the frig to stay cold longer, I can greatly cut down on the time that the generator has to run, the number of times it has to be started and stopped, the amount of gas it uses, the number of times it has to be re-fuled, and how much time I have to spend hearing it run. A little more information might get you more helpful responses. Thanks for any help people can give! what would help is when you have it on shore power, to cram lots of mass in it, like those blue ice packs Gould was talking about. If you get the refrig. good and full of food, ice packs, etc., that ice cold mass will keep the refrig. cooler longer, thus cutting down on the demand. |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
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??? about keeping refrigerators cold
wrote in message ... I have a large refrigerator and don't want to get rid of it since I'm on the boat a lot, and the majority of the time at the dock. But do like to go out for a couple of days each week, and the biggest issue is the frig getting too warm unless the generator runs more than I like it to. My suggestion would be to get an inverter and battery bank that would run it while you were away from the dock. I assume that by "large" you mean a standard household, frost free unit. These things can be real pigs on energy use, as most use as much energy heating things (and I don't mean the byproduct of cooling) as they do on the compressor. A typical frost free refrigerator has 1) a heater around the door sill (open the door, put you hand against the spot the rubber gasket would rest: it's warm, isn't it?) 2) A heater on the cooling coils, which is energized on a periodic basis to melt the ice that forms Many refrigerators also have a heater under the drip tray to evaporate the water that collects from the defrost cycle! A non-frost free refrigerator would require about 100 amp-hours a day to keep things cold. A regular frost free unit would probably require twice that. If you installed an inverter and a 200 amp-hour battery (two golf cart batteries in series) and then ran your generator for a few hours each day you could probably get by for two or three days. Rod |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
I have to go along with the inverter and a decent house battery bank. I
have an 8 cu ft household refrig on boart and run it off the inverter whenever under power, and can run it about 12 hours (in several 3 hour stretches) over 2 days. Once packed with food, they keep pretty cold by themselves - I still have ice in the trays after overnight without power. A bit of judicious power management makes everything work well. Jim "Rod McInnis" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... I have a large refrigerator and don't want to get rid of it since I'm on the boat a lot, and the majority of the time at the dock. But do like to go out for a couple of days each week, and the biggest issue is the frig getting too warm unless the generator runs more than I like it to. My suggestion would be to get an inverter and battery bank that would run it while you were away from the dock. I assume that by "large" you mean a standard household, frost free unit. These things can be real pigs on energy use, as most use as much energy heating things (and I don't mean the byproduct of cooling) as they do on the compressor. A typical frost free refrigerator has 1) a heater around the door sill (open the door, put you hand against the spot the rubber gasket would rest: it's warm, isn't it?) 2) A heater on the cooling coils, which is energized on a periodic basis to melt the ice that forms Many refrigerators also have a heater under the drip tray to evaporate the water that collects from the defrost cycle! A non-frost free refrigerator would require about 100 amp-hours a day to keep things cold. A regular frost free unit would probably require twice that. If you installed an inverter and a 200 amp-hour battery (two golf cart batteries in series) and then ran your generator for a few hours each day you could probably get by for two or three days. Rod |
??? about keeping refrigerators cold
The down side is that if you have a modified sinewave inverter (the
typical cheap ones), the compressor may run hot and its lifetime shortened by many years. A true sinewave inverter does much better but then again costs alot more. It's a tradeoff as usual. Doug s/v Callista "Marie Rabey" wrote in message ... I have to go along with the inverter and a decent house battery bank. I have an 8 cu ft household refrig on boart and run it off the inverter whenever under power, and can run it about 12 hours (in several 3 hour stretches) over 2 days. Once packed with food, they keep pretty cold by themselves - I still have ice in the trays after overnight without power. A bit of judicious power management makes everything work well. Jim "Rod McInnis" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... I have a large refrigerator and don't want to get rid of it since I'm on the boat a lot, and the majority of the time at the dock. But do like to go out for a couple of days each week, and the biggest issue is the frig getting too warm unless the generator runs more than I like it to. My suggestion would be to get an inverter and battery bank that would run it while you were away from the dock. I assume that by "large" you mean a standard household, frost free unit. These things can be real pigs on energy use, as most use as much energy heating things (and I don't mean the byproduct of cooling) as they do on the compressor. A typical frost free refrigerator has 1) a heater around the door sill (open the door, put you hand against the spot the rubber gasket would rest: it's warm, isn't it?) 2) A heater on the cooling coils, which is energized on a periodic basis to melt the ice that forms Many refrigerators also have a heater under the drip tray to evaporate the water that collects from the defrost cycle! A non-frost free refrigerator would require about 100 amp-hours a day to keep things cold. A regular frost free unit would probably require twice that. If you installed an inverter and a 200 amp-hour battery (two golf cart batteries in series) and then ran your generator for a few hours each day you could probably get by for two or three days. Rod |
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