Hey campers,
I've done a lot of reading about how well the stock refrigerator would perform on the stock solar setup and I came to the conclusion that it was basically useless for going off-grid. But, in the interests of science, I decided to do some investigation on my own. I wanted to share my results as I thought someone might find it interesting.
Camper:
Here's my hacked up test setup: you can see the sensor wires going into the fridge and freezer compartments and the small screen showing the readings.
Here's the results after a day and a half:
Observations:
At some point I might try another test, but in warmer weather and for a longer time period.
- Greg
I've done a lot of reading about how well the stock refrigerator would perform on the stock solar setup and I came to the conclusion that it was basically useless for going off-grid. But, in the interests of science, I decided to do some investigation on my own. I wanted to share my results as I thought someone might find it interesting.
Camper:
- 2022 Imagine 23LDE
- Solar: stock Furrion 165W single panel model# FSFP16MW (not cleaned for a while :-O )
- Refrigerator: stock Furrion 10cuft model# FCR10DCGTA (fridge/freezer was empty, and the temperature set to halfway on the dial for this test, but not turned on until the test started)
- disconnected from shore power
- ESP32 single board computer (powered from an external source - not the camper)
- 2 temperature sensors
- voltage sensor (I tapped into the 12v from the connection to the usb port right below the counter)
- SD card writer (wrote a sample to a CSV file once per minute)
- small amount of programming/code to lego it all together
Here's my hacked up test setup: you can see the sensor wires going into the fridge and freezer compartments and the small screen showing the readings.
Here's the results after a day and a half:
Observations:
- The refrigerator is clearly cooled by the freezer. You can see that the freezer dropped to zero in an hour but the fridge took about 2 1/2hrs to get to 40F.
- Initially, the unit is cycling about every 45 minutes, but as it gets dark and the solar drops out, it seems to know that the voltage isn't picking back up, so it slows down, presumably to conserve power. The longest cycle is close to 6hrs. I was a bit impressed that the unit was 'smarter' than expected.
- I wish I could've tracked when the compressor actually turned on and off, but there was no easy way to do that. It would be interesting from a nerd perspective, because there seems to be some type of predictive PID-type control going on.
- The reason I believe there is something more intelligent going on than a typical on/off thermostat: Assuming that I'm correct that the cooling unit is in the freezer, which in turn cools the fridge compartment, and the fact that the thermostat is in the fridge compartment, you can see that in the first few hours, the freezer temp starts to taper off as the fridge temp settles into range. Later, when the cycle is longer, the freezer starts working harder (lower temps) to keep the fridge in range. Maybe I'm wrong, but for me, this has all the signs of a predictive controller.
- By 8am, you can see the voltage start to creep back up from the solar.
- By mid-morning, the cycle starts picking back up
- The fridge temp spike on the right, around 5:30pm, is from opening the door for about 20 minutes. Since I was only periodically spot checking the test, I had no way to tell if the fridge was actually still working, or if it had shut down in the middle of the night and just stayed cold inside. I'd read in the manual that it will shut down instead of killing the battery, but it doesn't say if it's off for good or not.
- Eventually (somewhat surprisingly) it did kick on, and I closed the door and it went on it's merry way.
- After the test, the battery meter in the storage compartment said it had 75% life left and 76aH. It also showed it was drawing ~4A while the fridge was running (6A while connected to shore power)
- warmer ambient temperature
- opening/closing the refrigerator door to get 'stuff' (although having stuff in the fridge should help hold the cold)
- running the water pump
- running the furnace blower
- LED lights, probably not that much
At some point I might try another test, but in warmer weather and for a longer time period.
- Greg
Comment