Dahlia47 wrote:What sucks is some of the new coolers don't have drains. My Coleman cooler hinges broke, so we went to buy a new one. We got an igloo. But out of all of the coolers, we looked at...no drains! WTH? Why? Why on earth would they not put a drain on them?
So funny thing, the water is all thermal mass, so water with ice in it is @32F (or 0C) and helps to keep everything else cold longer. Drain your water and you melt more ice and run out faster.
Cooler drains have a horrible history of leaking as well. Easier to build a more insulated cooler without one, and it does better in "holds ice for x days" testing.
Dahlia47 wrote:The Jackery. I would love to have one of those! There is a van lifer I follow on youtube that has a couple of them and they seem like they would be perfect our little weekend outings! The little one I have does the basic job I need for now. It powers my mini cooler, charges my phone and tablet. The mini cooler, all I put in it is creamer, butter, milk, cheese, lunch meat, and eggs. Everything else we pack is either canned, boxed or dry goods. I found shelf-stable milk. The package is so small that I probably won't be putting that in the cooler anymore. And I like soft butter. After we get to our destination I always take it out.
So I've see the jackerys, but I wonder how they really price out compared to like a group 24 deep cycle. I get they are very portable, but since we are already bringing a vehicle, and a trailer, is super portable really that important for us?
Right now I can buy a group 24DCC from sams club for $55. Thats a 75Ah battery, discharge it to 75% (80 is considered safest max discharge) still lands you 675Wh.
A charger is under $50, and a decent inverter is $100. so $200 for something that is more juice than the Jackery 500 for less than half the cost.
But hey, to each their own, thats why we have an open market right?!
