Greg,
No, I appreciate the explanation. When I decided on the Arb, I did a little reading on options, and the thermo's inability to get really low in warm weather made them a non-start for me. I don't remember whether I looked at negative amp draw reviews, but I did see that the better real fridges with the Dan Foss type compressor seemed to run in the roughly 1 amp/hour, for a 24 hour time frame. I did another small test on my Arb on Sunday, as the sky was blue, but we had a lot of lighter clouds blowing through.
My Arb definitely runs at about 3.75 amps when running. .08 amps when sitting. My single 135 watt panel was pushing about 6 amps and change, 70 degrees and pointed well at the sun. I got about 0.2 amps from just cleaning the dust and mud spots off the panel, when I started. With a dead (warm) start up from 43 degrees inside, to running at 19, with the broken clouds passing through, I was able to run the fridge at the high heat point of the day, and still reach float (13.6v) on my sunsaver controller (it did start in bulk, at 14.4v). But with the clouds in front of the sun, I was only seeing about 1-2 amps from the panel. This definitely confirmed to me that a second 135 panel and more amp hours in my battery would certainly be needed for extended cloudy weather. I have a 75 amp hour battery in my portable center, and 55 amps hours in my second truck battery, for what, something like 50 amp hours of safe reserve.
Sorry for getting off track, but I thought perhaps a data point might help with your decisions as to whether or not to upgrade. I'll probably add a second 135 watt panel later this fall, for testing this winter. Fortunately, hinging this second panel to my first will still allow for it to be portable, and fit on the racks of my Avalanche. It looks like it would be easy to add a panel to your trailer mount (which is very nice) if needed.
Craig