We bought a SoCal Teardrop (Voyager Adventure) last September with no fridge. 1. I was being cheap, 2. An ice chest is just fine thank you, and 3. We travel with five big dogs (Borzoi) and go through roughly 5 gallons of water/day. I wanted 10 gallons on the tongue, 10 gallons in the galley, and 5 gallons in the tow vehicle (the ZoiVan), and you have all seen photos of a 50qt Arb nearly filling the under counter portion of the galley, or perhaps you even own one of those. Where would I put my 10 gallons of water?
But after last week's trip, eating soggy bread that had marinated in a dog-food slushy, I changed my mind and went looking for a fridge. I have now ordered a 49-liter Dometic CRX-50 truck fridge, and this thread will follow the install, including a solar panel to help run the fridge.
So here is our starting point.
Ten gallons of water and a 40 quart Icey-Tek cooler. Works fine up to the slushy problem.
But first, a 100W Renogy kit. It arrived with solar panel, charge controller and mounting brackets.
I start with what seems easiest: the Charge controller.
The battery and shore power are on the lower left of the galley.
.
I figured that would be a good place for the solar controller, and so:
A closeup shows the inline fuse holder from the controller to the battery.
An absolute piece of cake, although I did have to make a hardware run for primary wire to go to the battery and for an inline fuse holder (30Amp fuse).
Tomorrow, I hope to mount the solar panel on the roof of the trailer.
But after last week's trip, eating soggy bread that had marinated in a dog-food slushy, I changed my mind and went looking for a fridge. I have now ordered a 49-liter Dometic CRX-50 truck fridge, and this thread will follow the install, including a solar panel to help run the fridge.
So here is our starting point.
Ten gallons of water and a 40 quart Icey-Tek cooler. Works fine up to the slushy problem.
But first, a 100W Renogy kit. It arrived with solar panel, charge controller and mounting brackets.
I start with what seems easiest: the Charge controller.
The battery and shore power are on the lower left of the galley.
.
I figured that would be a good place for the solar controller, and so:
A closeup shows the inline fuse holder from the controller to the battery.
An absolute piece of cake, although I did have to make a hardware run for primary wire to go to the battery and for an inline fuse holder (30Amp fuse).
Tomorrow, I hope to mount the solar panel on the roof of the trailer.