I am pretty stoked on the wine chiller. I am not in need of a great amount of fridge space. Just a few drinks and snacks. Everybody is different. From the looks of things here a lot of people are doing some very serious cooking. Not me. I cook enough as it is. Also I am jacked about how cool the wine chillers look. Smoked glass door little red indicator light. I think it will look pretty awesome. Heck I might even put some wine in it!nrody wrote:If you change your door design for the restroom to a corrigated or sliding door this may make the space feel more usable.
My concern would be that the "wine cooler" just would not be sufficient to hold enough items that I would want refridgerated. I would end up with a cooler in addition to the refridgerated unit.
StandUpGuy wrote:Is there something I am not thinking of with these wine coolers? No freezer but I can live with that. Little capacity but that would work fine.
Yes I had been reading about the temperature. They vary a great deal. Some cool down to 39 degrees and some to 45 degrees. I have also read some complaints about some models not being able to cool down when the ambient temperature is high.bdosborn wrote:StandUpGuy wrote:Is there something I am not thinking of with these wine coolers? No freezer but I can live with that. Little capacity but that would work fine.
I would check what temperature it will cool down to. A guy up the street has one and it doesn't get cold enough to keep beer in. Anything above 40F is unsafe for food.
Bruce
proformance wrote:RE: Danby Wine Coolers,
I have owned a Danby DWC276BLS for about 4-years. It successfully cools down to 39deg regardless how much I over stuff with wine and beer. But, it also tends runs for long periods of time and is surely not the quietest appliance in the house. In fact, when the cooler first arrived, it was very noisy. I spent quite a bit of time identifying the root cause of the noise, vibration of some of the internal hard lines. After adding foam and several ty-raps to dampen the vibration, the cooler is now significantly quieter.
Note: There is very little insulation in the perimeter (housing) and I would be concerned with the potential for excessive energy consumption if you are forced to run the unit exclusively from battery power.
One additional consideration;
My Danby cooler tends to emit a considerable amount of heat from the vents located at the base of the front. I suspect this is primarily a result of the how often and how long the pump/motor runs to keep the cooler at 39deg.
My logic was the exact opposite. I was thinking how to get it as far away from the bed as possible.Air blowing on me while I sleep does something to my sinuses or something. This is a prime example of how and why everybodies build is different I suppose. We all have different criteria for the build.bdosborn wrote:Why not put the A/C at the front of the trailer so it blows across the bed? That's where I put mine and it works great.
Bruce
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