Holy smokes - disappear for a day and everyone gets busy!
To answer a few questions:
To run the ARB Elements and most refrigerators, you need a battery. Just a solar panel and controller can not supply enough amps during the initial spike when the compressor turns on, you would likely burn out the controller, fridge, or something else. Or it just wouldnt start because the voltage would drop low enough the fridge would not turn on due to battery protection.
To address the concerns about not running through the night, I had run approx 4PM Friday to (sometime Sunday morning) on solar/battery, keeping my fridge below freezing because I had some delicious brandy slush in the bottom I wanted to keep cold. Due to Newton's law of Cooling, it takes significantly more energy to maintain approx 60F temperature differential (80 Ambient to 20 Fridge) than it does to maintain a 50F temperature differential (80 Ambient to 30 Fridge). We had also put in a whole warm 30 pack of Coors Light on Saturday AM to take advantage of the solar we had through the morning on Saturday. Saturday afternoon was cloudy so we had minimal solar energy.
Lastly, I am running just a single OEM Toyota starter battery, so I don't want to run it too low. I am pretty aggressive with the battery voltage protection to keep some life in my starter battery.
My ARB elements fridge while running (after starting, compressor operational) draws less watts than my 120W panel puts out in good conditions. This means that during the daytime in direct sun, the fridge is essentially "free" - it does not consume any battery energy to run. Because of that, if you are around camp, you can use some strategy to cool heavily during the afternoon when you have good solar, then raise the temp during the evening to minimize battery impact. Also a good plan if you are in the midwest where the weather tomorrow could be totally different than the weather today. I am going to maybe try wrapping my fridge in a blanket or similar for time periods where the vehicle is not running but I am not using the fridge to help maintain the cooling best I can.
I can appreciate the food temp discussion, but we are taking things like beer and cheese and temp swings from 20 up to 35. Whenever we go with something like raw meat we keep it in the bottom of the fridge and load it in frozen. That way even with the fridge running in the 30s it takes days to thaw out.
To answer a few questions:
To run the ARB Elements and most refrigerators, you need a battery. Just a solar panel and controller can not supply enough amps during the initial spike when the compressor turns on, you would likely burn out the controller, fridge, or something else. Or it just wouldnt start because the voltage would drop low enough the fridge would not turn on due to battery protection.
To address the concerns about not running through the night, I had run approx 4PM Friday to (sometime Sunday morning) on solar/battery, keeping my fridge below freezing because I had some delicious brandy slush in the bottom I wanted to keep cold. Due to Newton's law of Cooling, it takes significantly more energy to maintain approx 60F temperature differential (80 Ambient to 20 Fridge) than it does to maintain a 50F temperature differential (80 Ambient to 30 Fridge). We had also put in a whole warm 30 pack of Coors Light on Saturday AM to take advantage of the solar we had through the morning on Saturday. Saturday afternoon was cloudy so we had minimal solar energy.
Lastly, I am running just a single OEM Toyota starter battery, so I don't want to run it too low. I am pretty aggressive with the battery voltage protection to keep some life in my starter battery.
My ARB elements fridge while running (after starting, compressor operational) draws less watts than my 120W panel puts out in good conditions. This means that during the daytime in direct sun, the fridge is essentially "free" - it does not consume any battery energy to run. Because of that, if you are around camp, you can use some strategy to cool heavily during the afternoon when you have good solar, then raise the temp during the evening to minimize battery impact. Also a good plan if you are in the midwest where the weather tomorrow could be totally different than the weather today. I am going to maybe try wrapping my fridge in a blanket or similar for time periods where the vehicle is not running but I am not using the fridge to help maintain the cooling best I can.
I can appreciate the food temp discussion, but we are taking things like beer and cheese and temp swings from 20 up to 35. Whenever we go with something like raw meat we keep it in the bottom of the fridge and load it in frozen. That way even with the fridge running in the 30s it takes days to thaw out.