jeep-N-montero
Expedition Leader
Looking at the computer case fans in the 120-140mm size and amp draw is in the 0.13-0.45 range, should be pretty easy to install.
I have a friend that uses a thermoelectric cooler with great sucess. Stocks it like a regular cooler along with frozen gallon water jugs. Uses the vehicle to power it durring travel and on the trail then the water jugs take over when the rigs not running. Makes frozen water bottles last a week.
I use a CB sometimes too. :Wow1:
My truck isn't Expo white.
I wear cotton pants.
Good find BTW.
Looking at the computer case fans in the 120-140mm size and amp draw is in the 0.13-0.45 range, should be pretty easy to install.
That's quite a bit large for inside the unit, you want something tiny, like around 30mm, and a 0.05 or less amp draw (or about a half-watt). That's all you need to swirl air around inside there, anything bigger would generate more heat, making the unit work harder.
Good find though.
I had a Koolatron years ago too (got it as a freebie). It did keep things nice & cool, though it used a lot of power doing so. The fan continuing to spin after the thermostat shut off (even if you unplug it) was always a curiosity, the temp differential across the peltier junctions made them act as little power generators until their inside & outside temps stabilized.
That still seems like a lot of fan for your little Koolatron... You have to remember whatever amount of power the fans draw will end up as heat inside your unit, causing it to consume more power extracting that heat (disconnecting one of that unit's two fans might work good, maybe experiment with it a bit).
This is more what I had in mind:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-Sunon-M...441?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item53edd79241
It's 4.6CFM airflow should be plenty to keep the ~ 3 cu.ft. (or less with contents) of air inside that thing in circulation (I've thought of putting one like that in my Edgestar fridge, though it already seems to work pretty good without one).
Are you referring to friction across the blades causing heat inside the fridge or heat from the motors? Now you have me thinking....