We have found that both top opening and front opening small fridges mean you will be taking things out to find other things. Small space packed full = inevitable.
Personally, as my back and knees are not so good as they used to be, the idea of kneeling on the floor and/or bending over to do this made it a simple decision to go with the chest Engel, especially when you add the energy efficiency.
You don't have to lose space above the chest type fridge if you build it in to your countertop. In this example, you get lots of light into the fridge to make finding that special bit of food even easier.View attachment 324063View attachment 324064
I think that drawing is really perfect. Keep in mind that the refrigerator gives off some heat, at least mine does, so make sure there's plenty of ventilation so it doesn't overheat. And one more thing, make sure the power cord have some kind of spring attached to it so it doesn't get pinched when you slide it in and out. If I ever rebuild my cabinets I think I might have to use your idea.
After literally years of struggling to build an interior around a chest fridge, I finally went with a front-opening fridge on my most recent build iteration, and I love it:
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The whole "cold air spilling out" thing is sort of a myth - it's the temperature of the mass inside the fridge (food/drinks) that really matters; the thermal mass of a couple of cubic feet of air is nothing compared to the food. My Truckfridge TF49 is running the exact same Danfoss compressor that all the big-boy chest fridges use, and it was a LOT more space efficient for me in my small van. It pulls about 25AH/day, so I get at least two days out of my 100AH Group31 house battery even if I don't deploy the solar panel or do any driving.
A chest fridge needs room above to be opened, so either you waste that space, of you have to put it on a pull-out to open it. In my case I also hated having that flat surface in the van because my wife/kid inevitably piled stuff on top if it that I then needed to move whenever I wanted to get a beer or food to cook. Obviously a front-opener needs room to open, but I find most van builds have either a "hallway" or other living space that the door can sweep through without causing big problems.
I sold my 5-year-old Edgestar FP430 fridge when I bought this, so overall this was a very inexpensive upgrade and it made the interior layout in my van SO MUCH more efficient.
The Engel also originally opened from the short end, but it is quite easy to take off the hinge and latch and reconfigure. We ordered a piece of butcher block from a restaurant supply house online and cut it size and then just went the hardware store for some stainless piano hinge. We actually don't even use the latch we put on the long side as the weight of the countertop keeps it closed tightly. Oh, also got some weatherproofing gasketing at the hardware store to put on the top edges of the fridge under the wood countertop. Getting the height of the fridge shelf right so the top is flush with the rest of the counter is the main fussy task - the rest is amazingly easy.
...Dometic 2.2: Fan replaced with efficient/quiet fan...
Did the fridge have pwm fan as oe? Did you retrofit pwm control? Is that a 3 pin or 4 pin (wire) fan?
How big of an improvement did you see with the new fan? What's the better fan's best feature(s)? I'm fan-ignorant.
Am I correctly reading your photos of a Noctua NF-F12 PWM? Am I correct in thinking that's about a $20 fan? Is that the best fan you found or just one you had or...? Sorry for all the ?'s. Thanks in advance