by Trackstriper » Thu Mar 06, 2008 11:50 pm
I looked at Brian's reply and it got me thinking a bit. There really is no correct answer as to which system is best. A lot depends upon just what you are trying to do with the teardrop, or in my case tiny travel trailer. Are you leaving work early Friday afternoon to go to the mountains for the weekend at a primitive campsite? Are you camping in the desert for a week at a remote location, maybe by yourself for total solitude? Are you going to an established campground with shore power? Do you need a place to hole up for two weeks while the storm passes and you can return to your homestead? etc.
For ultimate off-grid sustainability, a serious battery pack, several solar cells (supplemented with a very small generator for the cloudy days), and a DC fridge ought to do the trick. Very elegant solution, couple 'o grand perhaps should do it. Actually, it would be very nice if your needs were to be self sufficient for a long stretch.
But it would be total overkill if you had available shore power because a $149 mini fridge would blow away the mega system in storage capacity and overall cost effectiveness. So it depends upon where you intend to go, and what your assets are when you get there.
My particular needs are not totally uncommon, but my wife and I introduce an interesting wrinkle into the equation. We're both somewhat chemically sensitive...not a terrible case but it's enough of an issue that I really can't just buy a small commercially built travel trailer. I work out of town a lot with my odd business. The last several years I have pretty much given up on motels and have created a small living space in my full-sized work van. This space occupies the 42" behind the front seats and has a transverse bunk and a combination shower/porta-potti enclosure. My cubbyhole is totally sealed-off from my equipment in the rear of the van by a serious bulkhead. I have electric hot water and the showers are great. Did a 3-1/2 week business trip out west in it, I've got probably 200 nights total time. Motels that I can afford are "cleaned" with smelly air freshener...if you know what I mean. More chemicals. Wife and I have hard times with most motels, not all. The van is a solo rig for lodging but it could tow a small trailer to house us! So what I'm looking for is not so much of a "camping" experience, but a clean, controlled-environment, mini-motel that I can tow with me. Also tow to the jobsite so wife can be near during the day, maybe stay at night at job, depending upon location. Cook healthy food. Win, win, win!
So for me, ice is not twenty miles away. I might even have shore power, and certainly a small genny for the AC if shore power is not available. I'm thinking that ice though, absolutely, always, works if it's there in reasonable quantities. It can't break. It doesn't hum at night, it doesn't give off additional heat (DC fridges probably do much better in this regard than the cheap AC units). And it's something I can afford.
But I hear the siren call of that mini-fridge! Tough to get to the right answer on this one.
Regarding dry ice. I will have an interior galley and I don't even want to have to think about CO2 doing it phase change thing from solid to gas...not inside a trailer I'll be occupying. Not even with the best noodled-out vent system. Outdoors, or in the rear of a properly sealed TD, that's a different question. Thanks for the input though. I would think it would be hard to come up with dry ice in some of the Podunk towns I've visited. Maybe not.
J.B.