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blackwolfmt
Senior Nomad
Posts: 802
Registered: 1-18-2014
Location: On The Beach With A Blackwolf
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Mood: dreamin of Riden out a hurricane in Baja
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Quote: Originally posted by Hook | Quote: Originally posted by Buckland | I have the Isotherm 12V 65L. Great fridge, quiet, super efficient. Have a 160 W solar panel and 2 AGM batteries. Never ram out of juice or cold beer!
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Show us your unit, please.
DC only? Fridge only? Fridge/freezer? Chest type or built-in? |
Now dat is funny
since were on XXX I still luv my dometic 3 Way the propane its a great backup when the sun aint shinning to charge the battery
So understand dont waste your time always searching for those wasted years
face up and make your stand and realize that your living in the golden years
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rts551
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6699
Registered: 9-5-2003
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Some of you keep talking about top loading refrigerators....I have not seen any of these built into campers. Are we talking 2 different issues or am
I that far behind the times?
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woody with a view
PITA Nomad
Posts: 15939
Registered: 11-8-2004
Location: Looking at the Coronado Islands
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Mood: Everchangin'
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Ralph, they mean ARB style aftermarket refers. Not your typical built into a pop up or cab over.
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aguachico
Senior Nomad
Posts: 602
Registered: 3-23-2007
Location: tijuana
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Mood: logic cannot get thru to the illogical
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I'm looking at this unit, It can do freezer or fridge. I like to vac seal meats for a weeks worth of camping So as I load the freezer with vac sealed
fish or seal meat, I can remove the the meat to eat. Then eventually before packing to leave for home both sides will serve as a freezer with all vac
sealed meats ready for transfer. Best thing is getting back without a any meat to process.
https://www.dometic.com/en-us/us/products/food-and-beverage/...
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rts551
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6699
Registered: 9-5-2003
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I see. Wasn't the OP talking about a built in frig? Maybe the thread morphed.
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woody with a view
PITA Nomad
Posts: 15939
Registered: 11-8-2004
Location: Looking at the Coronado Islands
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Mood: Everchangin'
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Not sure, my atteention span is shrinking these days.
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Ken Cooke
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8942
Registered: 2-9-2004
Location: Riverside, CA
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Mood: Its Pole Line Road time
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I have the Dometic CFX-65DZ (CFX 65 Quart dual zone). It works great at keeping my fruits, vegetables, and mineral water refrigerated. I use the
freezer compartment to keep my vegatable burgers and Indian food meals frozen). I usually pack some tuna sandwiches for the road, and this is much
better than using an ice chest.
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msteve1014
Senior Nomad
Posts: 947
Registered: 12-2-2006
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Yes, and yes. Now lets talk about fishing. It all runs together right??
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PaulW
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3068
Registered: 5-21-2013
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The Dometec and arb and many other portable frig/freezers work great, but to use in a camper/travel trailer/5er/motorhome the thing would have to sit
on the floor and use up valuable space. Baja Nomads has several threads exactly for portable Frig/freezers. Take your discussion there.
This thread was supposed to be about the 3 way units commonly used on campers/travel trailers/5ers/motorhomes not about the portable frig freezers.
Having said that I find the most efficient usage for a 3 way is to use it on Propane when dry camping and 110v in an RV park or at home. 12v usage
works as long as the battery survives which can be long or short depending on age and its amp hours. A 12 volt battery may work for many usages in the
camper, but the 3way frig/freezer will probably be the most severe usage and kill the battery the fastest. I always use mine on the 12v setting when
connected to the tow rig with the motor running. This avoids turning off the propane when stopping to fuel the tow rig. Its always good to practice
safe procedures. It is also the law in many states that require no propane systems can be active when traveling thru tunnels. Another safety issue.
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rts551
Elite Nomad
Posts: 6699
Registered: 9-5-2003
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I suppose...My Samsung refrig works great on 110. I tried it on Propane...damn thing blew up.
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Hook
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9009
Registered: 3-13-2004
Location: Sonora
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Mood: Inquisitive
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Just to clarify, there ARE purely electrical, 12v or 110v, upright compressor fridges, WITHOUT PROPANE CAPABILITY, that can be built in to existing
truck camper fridge openings. The doors open outward, like a conventional home fridge. They are not cheap......but neither are the traditional 3-way
(propane, 12v, 110v) fridges that originally came with the camper. Most camper companies now offer these as an option. They have been around for ages
in boats, where propane is disdained by some. They have begun to put them in RVs for a few years now.
The "table-top" style fridge/freezers are much cheaper (still not cheap, though) but MOST force you to choose between fridge and freeze. USUALLY, you
have to go up to the 65 qt size or larger (still not that big, really) to have separate fridge and freeze compartments. There are exceptions.
It is VERY nice to have the capability of using propane for being off-grid in areas where clouds are common or trees are tall and dense. Seriously, I
suspect a 5 gallon propane tank might power my 3 way fridge for about three weeks in ambient temps around 80 degrees during the day and 60 degrees at
night. My camper has TWO, 7.5 gallon tanks.
Keeping the rig level is important, but it doesnt have to be completely level. It still works fine.
I always drive with my fridge in the propane setting. Some campers I have owned are more prone to blowing out than others. I check it at each stop.
I honestly think if I was buying a new RV, I would still go with a propane capable one over a compressor. You have to begin thinking about sun
exposures, solar panels, multiple batteries, possible generator use, finding 110v for serious battery charging, with a compressor.
Propane is easy to find everywhere. Mexico, US, Canada. Very off-grid friendly.
[Edited on 11-24-2017 by Hook]
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Ken Cooke
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8942
Registered: 2-9-2004
Location: Riverside, CA
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Mood: Its Pole Line Road time
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Quote: Originally posted by PaulW | The Dometec and arb and many other portable frig/freezers work great, but to use in a camper/travel trailer/5er/motorhome the thing would have to sit
on the floor and use up valuable space. Baja Nomads has several threads exactly for portable Frig/freezers. Take your discussion there.
This thread was supposed to be about the 3 way units commonly used on campers/travel trailers/5ers/motorhomes not about the portable frig freezers.
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Whoops! I read the subject and immediately chimed in without investigating the earlier posts. Buy, so far, my Dometic fridge has been great! I'll
watch for more fridge threads so that I can brag about my fridges USB connectivity.
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aguachico
Senior Nomad
Posts: 602
Registered: 3-23-2007
Location: tijuana
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Mood: logic cannot get thru to the illogical
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Got a Dometic dzw-95. It is easy to lift because it is not too long. Preliminary testing shows it seals well and doesn't cycle often.
'
They use a slight of hand trick calling it a 95 liter fridge, when actually it is 85 liters internally.
Field testing to come.
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Cliffy
Senior Nomad
Posts: 986
Registered: 12-19-2013
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Back to the OP-
I have an old 120 volt/gas ABSORBTION style refer in my TT. All refers that use propane are called ABSORBTION refers by the way they work. They have
no electric driven compressor. They use heat and a gas transfer in a sealed coil to effect the cooling process
The ones with a 12 volt side have a probe (@6" long) that gets very hot and is next to the "boiler" of the refer sealed coil so as to heat the special
liquid within and run the cooling process.
The propane burner heats the same "boiler" without using any electricity.
The electric probe is using around 350 watts of electricity. At 12 volts this is @ 29 amps. 10 hrs of usage is @ 290 amp hrs. Well beyond your battery
capacity.
I use the propane side all the time ( I shut it down getting gas, no big deal). I have 2 7.5 gallon propane tanks and have never had any problems. I
can run it on one tank for weeks.
If I had hookups I would use the electric side for extended stays. Save the cost of propane.
You chose your position in life today by what YOU did yesterday
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Hook
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9009
Registered: 3-13-2004
Location: Sonora
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Mood: Inquisitive
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Some people report that their absorption fridges work best on propane, but the two I have had always worked best on 110v. I also think it is more
resilient to being unlevel on 110v.
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mtgoat666
Select Nomad
Posts: 18296
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
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Mood: Hot n spicy
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Traveling sure is whole lot less complicated camping out of a pickup truck or suv, getting by with just a couple of iced coolers
Woke!
“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America
will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”
Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we
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Hook
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9009
Registered: 3-13-2004
Location: Sonora
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Mood: Inquisitive
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Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666 | Traveling sure is whole lot less complicated camping out of a pickup truck or suv, getting by with just a couple of iced coolers |
I disagree. It's more complicated.
Keeping things dry. Draining away water. Keeping them in a cool environment. Making ice runs, if you are camping in one spot for a week or more.
Ice is a pain in the ass. The only good place for ice is in a drink.
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bajaboy1
Newbie
Posts: 22
Registered: 7-20-2010
Location: Fallbrook, Ca.
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I have a 6 cu. ft. Dometic fridge in in my cab over camper. It doesn't work very well on propane or electricity. When camping, when the temp gets
over 85 or 90 degrees it just doesn't cool. I keep a thermometer inside the fridge and sometimes it gets up to 60 degrees or so. Thinking of buying
a new one, but don't know which works the best in hot weather. All manufacturers say theirs is the best. Tried exhaust fans and inside fans.
Nothing helps when beach camping on hot days.
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Timinator
Nomad
Posts: 244
Registered: 6-27-2014
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If you have a 3 way fridge;
12V while driving after everything is cold from either being plugged in or propane. The 12V side uses a lot of amps to try and keep the fridge
cold. It's also wise to rewire your RV electrical plug to the fridge with at least a 10 gauge wire, 8 gauge is best.
110V Always when you have it available
Propane Other than the initial cool down over night plugged into 110V this is how I run all my RV fridges. It's efficient and a propane tank can
run a fridge for weeks and weeks, maybe even a month or more.
As somebody else said, if it's not a newer RV fridge, put a small solar powered fan in the fridge areas outside door to push out the heat to the roof
stack/exhaust. It will make it cool much more efficient. If you're at a camp site without electrical hookups, you can even open your outside
fridedoor (with screen) a bit to allow more fresh air up through the system.
A small fan inside the fridge also circulates the air inside and helps too, especially if the fridge is an older one.
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