Podunkfla wrote:jmullan99... Sounds like a good plan. Plus, if you are going to install one of those little dorm/bar fridges built in, you can vastly improve their efficiency by wrapping them with 2 or 3 inches of foam insualtion board. You can get about another R-30 or so in a small space and prolly double the amount of time between compressor cycles. Insulation is cheaper than electricity...
Of course, ya have to vent the condenser coils somehow, preferably to the outside.
jmullan99 wrote:Podunkfla wrote:jmullan99... Sounds like a good plan. Plus, if you are going to install one of those little dorm/bar fridges built in, you can vastly improve their efficiency by wrapping them with 2 or 3 inches of foam insualtion board. You can get about another R-30 or so in a small space and prolly double the amount of time between compressor cycles. Insulation is cheaper than electricity...
Of course, ya have to vent the condenser coils somehow, preferably to the outside.
Yes, but you have to watch. A lot of fridges now have the condesner coils inside the sheet metal sides. Covering those would be a no-no. Look for ones with the coils on the rear.
Cheers.
Alphacarina wrote:Another consideration (and a big one if you're counting energy consumption) is that they are all front loaders - With a front loading box, you dump out all the cold everytime you open the door . . . . even for just a couple seconds, so the cooling process must begin anew everytime you open the door
Don
jmullan99 wrote:My sister had a thermo-electric cooler, with an AC adapter added as a load. There was quite a bit more water pump usage with 7 people. The fridge was opened quite a bit more often. I again had it loaded with 24 frozen bottles of water. They melted quite a bit faster with the increased access to the fridge.
John
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