I stand corrected and look forward to discovering other wonders of the 21st century. You'll be telling me next that they have invented long life gas mantles.
I look forward to seeing the results when the fridge is in practical use in higher ambient temperatures.
As you say the manufacturers quote 220 wh per day for the fridge plus 240 wh for the inverter giving a total consumption of 460 wh or about 40 ah per day.
Fine for your setup, but marginal for those of us with more modest solar / battery configurations.
I honestly have no idea what a Gas Mantle is! (this is probably one reason why I steered away from Gas Fridges and Heating!)
I would agree that if you had a typical Leisure battery of say 90Ah, which is commonly fitted (VW fit a 75Ah battery if you specify a factory aux/leisure battery), then an All-Electric Fridge may not be a solution - be it 12V DC or 230V AC[/QUOTE]
Is it possible to install some form of time switch between the battery and the inverter?
Something like 0600- 0900; 1200-1600; 2000- 2400 would reduce the overall consumption by around 130wh per day and I suspect would have no impact on the fridge contents.
Good luck and keep publishing.
This is a very interesting point. Given the pattern of On & Off seems to be very much short bursts of energy followed by a long dormant period (bit like myself in fact
), I was also thinking a way to eliminate a lot of that Inverter Overhead would be to actually have some kind of time-switch for the Inverter.
I actually already use a 200A relay to remotely control the power to the inverter and as that uses a very low power control signal to turn on and off, a basic time-clock with a switch output would work well. You might end up with a little more fridge temp internal fluctuation as it can't turn on EXACTLY when it likes, but I do think it would do the job well enough.
However, my testing has switched to a different setup as I mentioned in the last update - "Day 3" I think it was called. More of that in a minute, but you might like it ....