Slightly off topic from the OP's topic, but since he is mostly concerned about safely powering the Fridge and still having enough juice to start the vehicle here's some possibly relevant info from my experience.
#1. We should all be happy that compressor fridges have become efficient enough to be run off batteries for a day or two or more.
Without more solar than you need, and a large bank of isolated auxiliary batteries here are a couple tips to keep the duty cycle down, and the beers frosty. Some are obvious, others might not be.
-Keep it out of the sun.
-If you are keeping it in the vehicle, keep it low, and use sun shades in all the windows to keep the interior of the vehicle as cool as possible.
- Make sure the intake and exhaust vents are not obstructed, make sure the cooling fins are not obstructed with dust, lint and hair.
-The more it is opened, the more air cold air spills out. So opening in a windier area is even more detremental to keeping duty cycle low.
-Know where everything is inside the fridge so you don't have to waste time looking.
-When adding warm beer to the cold fridge, if possible, do so first thing in the morning when the ambient temps are the coolest, and the fridge has to work less hard to suck the heat from them.
- An empty fridge runs more than one full of already cold things. If you are nearly out of food, keep the empty, or full water bottles inside so less air can spill out.
-If you do have solar and the batteries are full, or are driving the vehicle, turn it way up effectively storing the extra energy by having the food/ beer colder. Just don't freeze the beer. And turn it back down once the sun is down or you stop driving.
I have a front loading 'dorm' style Norcold. It's compressor drew 2.7 amps when new, and ~33 months later draws about 2.4 amps. I have added 1/2 inch of insulation to the sides, with another 1/2 inch of dead air space before the sides of the insulated cabinet it resides within. I removed the compressor from the back and rolled on 3 layers of aluminum backed 1/8 inch thick self adhesive rubber sheeting, and reinstalled the compressor over that, more for vibration suppression than extra insulation. I have added a computer muffin fan that draws air from the floor underneath the fridge and blows it over the compressor and cooling fins. I have added a 12 volt 25 mm muffin fan in the interior. Directly behind and above the cooling fins, I have a sliding window actuated by my former sofa bed motor. I covered the window with louvered vents. I can direct the forced air to exhaust through the window, or inside the vehicle.
I find that in my normal use, my duty cycle is well under 30%, meaning the maximum my fridge is likely to use in 90 deg f ambient daytime temps in 24 hours is under 20 amp hours. From 10 pm to 9 am, It uses about 6 a/h including my fans and TV, and LED reading lights with ~60 f degree over night temps.
I also have 130 watts of solar, So I don't even stress the electricity unless I get 5 or 6 seriously overcast days.