1aquaholic
Adventurer
Any thoughts or experience with these batteries?
http://fireflyenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/12VE31-brochure.pdf
j
http://fireflyenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/12VE31-brochure.pdf
j
I see nothing particularly special about that unit, besides the connectivity features.
Does look nice, is light, and compact.
From the specs provided, it doesnt draw much less, if any, than a traditional 5k BTU unit.
Operating in a 12 Volt system it will still be drawing 40+ amps when running.
Hi Mntal
The price is very low, the noise level seems to be very high....
Ok thanks. Keep us informed about the fitting of this unit on your rig and the results.
Maybe no scientifically, but practically. I would suggest that efficiency, per se, is not the issue, but rather the fact that the A/C's are too large and thus consume too much power.
If the unit is undersized by a large percentage, of course cooling effect will diminish.
But stating that NO COOLING will result is completely false.
When relative to the same camper with no cooling at all, the one with the AC unit, even severely undersized, will always be cooler.
By how much is your only variable.
The simple fact is that the vast majority of folks that are interested in AC units (many who start and respond to these types of threads) are in the small to medium size camper range.
That range puts the ideal BTU output for an AC below 5k BTU. This is what the industry is lacking right now.
2-3k BTU units would be ideal for this crowd, and would satisfy the needs of 90+% of the typical truck campers and small tow trailers.
Dropping to that ideal BTU rating creates two things.... a MUCH more efficient camper that is considerably easier to manage and maintain temps and humidity levels,
and a cooling system that most would be considerably easier and realistic to run using solar and a decent battery bank.
A simple calculator that can be used to show just how many BTU you need for your specific space can be found here:
http://www.calculator.net/btu-calculator.html
This is where inverter units like our MHI really excel.
I can lock it to a maximum output of ~900W (~3000BTU) where its sipping just ~180W of electrical power. Usually thats after I use the "boost" mode where its pushing ~3100W (~11000BTU) to quickly cool the camper down. Variable speed compressor = best of both worlds.
18 months of full time travel around Australia including plenty of beach and track work and its still going strong.
If it failed tomorrow its only ~$590usd to replace.
This calculator gives a 30 to 50% lower result than the reality because
It does not take into consideration the the influence of 2 or more persons on board and the ventilation needs is very high in a small box like an RV.
In my long year AC experience on all sort of mobile applications I never had a “normal” RV where a maximum of ~900W (~3000BTU) cooling capacity was really sufficient.