This is by far one of the best solar chargers, dc fridge and everything else in between channel! Got tired of the cigarette cable getting knocked out of my Bluetti by my kid and was wondering if there was a better alternative. Jasonoid to the rescue!
I hate how the default connector for the industry is a connector that was designed to light cigarettes on fire and not really transfer power. We need a new standard! Xt60 or something
I bought an extra cig plug ($20) from ICECO for my GO20. That way I can still use the A/C adapter with the supplied cig cord. I cut the additional cig plug off as you did and installed a right angle 5521 plug. This reduces the risk damaging the plug and socket when installed in my Bluetti EB55. All this gear has survived nicely when bouncing down the road. Thanks for your videos. I used your reviews to select both of these pieces of equipment.
When I first watched this video a several months ago I didn't really understand it, so I glossed over it. Now that I have a bit more knowledge regarding 12V accessories, this video has made so much more sense. I had no idea what APP was prior to checking out the channel. Thanks for making it!
I recommend heat shrink instead of the tesa tape. Also, if you cut the plus and minus wires to different lengths so you can offset the connection points it makes for less of a bump in the cable, and increases the insulation between the lines. Anderson powerpoles are awesome!
I've standardized on Anderson Powerpoles for all my 12VDC needs, including portable solar panels. I wish more portable batteries / power stations would use them.
I do wire soldering differently. This is actually the first time I have seen the "side by side" wires with having the solder itself be the "connection". Electrons travel on the surface as you know and maybe the system you showed is best/better. I align the wires striped further back and twist them into each other, together in a straight line, not uninsulated wires next to itself with the twisted pair sticking outward from both insulated. Then solder lightly and wrap. I saw the extension with Anderson on both ends... good idea, I'd not thought of that before. Also on that Eb3A a friend ordered one and came by the shop and Bluetti didn't/doesn't give cables to plug in to the solar panel. It would be neat to find the right socket etc. ... we found the number by watching a video and they popped up the number, Bluetti doesn't have it in their manual or documentation. They simply say DC connection... I could not get my Bluetti 120 folding panel to connect. It works great with the Eb55 I use..
although twisting them together will result in a better connection to allow higher amperages with lower heat generation, doing it side by side will work fine if the wire gauge is larger than what is needed. your method would be better yes, but his method is not "wrong" but less efficient.
fantastic suggestion! I have 2 portable fridges that repeatedly keep losing power because of those flaky cigarette plugs! I have now ordered the barrel connectors and can't wait to fix it once and for all. Thank you so much for this very helpful suggestion.
Be careful with the 5521 pigtails. I've gotten a bad batch of those that melted at 5 amps. it's never happened with the screw terminal connectors but it did with the pigtails.
Just wanted to say thanks for all your great ideas!! I've been following you for a few years now and am I glad I do. It all started for me with the 505 Bilbene and I have just progressed after that. Now I have 14 solar panels our in my yard running the Bilbene 505, 3 Bluetti 200P's, an Oakitel P2001 and an EG4 hand truck setup with a 5000w EG4 server rack battery. I have cut my electric bill down from $300+ a month to under $40. I also got the Iceco 45L for my camping trips and a Silvel diesel heater. I am starting to feel like your clone! Thanks for all your help. Have a Merry Christmas!
Very informative video, Jason. I can sure use this info as I'm a novice with cables and usually buy the usually very expensive ones online. This is a real gem of info for me. Thanks again.
Hey J. Do you have same how to but replacing the other end of the cord and the plug attached to the fridge? I got a fridge cord that melted and wondering if I could modify it with those yellow connectors. Thanks much
that is some great soldering skills, and no cold solder joints. its easy to tell when there is a cold solder joint because the color will be muted and less shiny. and you had a good level of solder holding the joints together, not too little and not too much. too little can result in a weaker connection, too much doesn't really matter but you use more material. if you need a high amperage connection, using solder may result in the heat melting the solder and weakening the connection, so using a mechanical connection would be better. of course that also depends on the gauge of the wire. thicker wires can handle more current before getting hot. sorry for the rant there. as for the tape at the end, i usually use more heat shrink and cover the entire joint with some larger diameter heat shrink. as a suggestion for the outermost heat shrink, you can get weather proof heat shrink, it basically has glue in it, to make the entire joint water tight.
Great tips P M. For the most part these solder joints will be okay for low amp loads. Any high power connections I prefer a crimp / solder combo. Thanks for the feedback, always love hearing your thoughts.
Ferrules would make the screw terminals a lot more safe. Add a bit of heat shrink over the plastic part of the ferrule (using marine grade heat shrink that is dual wall adhesive) and that adds another way of securing the your little contraption from coming apart because sometimes the cheapo DC power cables don't have quite as many strands as they should and the ferrule doesn't crimp down as tight as it should, I've only come across this once though. And just to clarify, when crimping ferrules you are crimping the metal tip. There are actually UA-cam videos out there instructing people to crimp the plastic part. I've actually found that crimping the plastic AFTER crimping the metal tip of the ferrule does indeed help secure the ferrule to the insulation of the wire if you're paranoid about the crimp on the raw conductor not being being solid enough. And this comment wouldn't be complete without soldering criticism! I've been a fan of stripping a tad more insulation and spreading the strands out (kind of like a flower) and shoving them together. Then instead of using thin bus wire or some other wire I use my thinner solder wire to tightly wrap around the joined area. I've already applied some flux to the conductors so combined with the flux inside my solder wire it flows like butter and the wrap stays really tight until the last second but by then part of the wrap has already flown into the wire so I end up with what normally isn't too terribly large of a bulge. I can usually get away with heat shrink that just fits over the wire's insulation also fitting over my splice and blob of solder
Can I cut the end of my refrigerator plug off, and wire it to my After market fuse Box that is connected to my truck batteries. The fuse Box i put in, operates a few lights in the back of my Van.
@@Jasonoid thanks for the info. My new transit Van automatically shuts off the power sources after about 20 minutes. So I have to figure out a way to keep my refrigerator running as long as I want it to run, not as long as Ford wants it to run.
For my Setpowers. I found that eco mode for my fridge actually uses more power overall because the compressor stays on longer and uses at least 25% more watts overall. If I leave the chest fridge in max mode it uses slightly more watts but shuts off much sooner and stays off longer. I get on the eb3a about 5 extra hours.
This is awesome and exactly what I want to do! I'm going to go with fridge cable to Anderson. Then I can plug directly into my DIY power station (based off your build!) and then make a 5521 adapter for my retail power stations (Bluetti, Golabs). Great video!!
@@Jasonoid Jason, Can I just run the solar cables from panels into my camper to my mppt charge controller, 300 amp hour lifepo4, and 1500 watt inverter to power a small air conditioner without grounding or can it damage something or be dangerous? We have lightning here so the panels will be disconnected before storms or moved inside when I go to town. I don`t want to damage or fry a system that cost over 2000 bucks. Don`t have money to replace an 1100 dollar battery. I can`t find any clear info.
Why do you prefer the Anderson over SAE. I am looking to wire 12v to the bed of my truck and thinking to do an Anderson or SAE plug in option instead of the cigarette lighter. Any insight would be appreciated.
SAE has no respect to polarity and can get very confusing on which side is positive or negative. It can also be hard to connect and disconnect (especially in cold temps). I like Anderson because it can't be connected in reverse polarity and it's easy to disconnect and connect. I also like how they are actually rated for specific amps (15, 30 or 45 amp sizes). Sae isn't rated for a specific amp limit so it's a bit questionable on higher loads.
Hoping you can answer my question here :) i have a ICECO VL60 12V fridge/freezer and i am using a Eco-Flow Delta Pro as my power source for a van build, i am using a 12 way fuse box that i bought on amazon, would i be able to cut the 12v plug in that came with my ICECO exposing the wires and hooking them into my 12 way fuse box along with my other 12V item si have attached to the fuse box, maxxair fans x 2 and wall fans x 2.
Thanks for this Jason, just now putting together parts for Setpower RV45D adapter to Bluetti EB70 barrel plug... Would there be any significant advantage to using 10-2 wire from West Marine ( marine grade ) or would that just be overkill ... fridge to EB70 cable length will be 6ft. ... EB70 to PV200 solar panel extension cords will be 10ft and 20ft . Also, I'm familiar with 110 and 220 residential electric wiring, not 12 volt wiring, why no third ground wire .. neutral is ground? one way energy flow on live wire? No such thing as a dumb question???
I'm all about safety. Any thoughts on adding one of those inline automotive style fuse enclosures in case anything goes south with the cable or power station? Would a 10a fuse be a good choice?
10 amp fuse would be fine, all fridges have replaceable fuses and the power stations have over current protection, if the stock cable didn't have one, it's also my opinion you don't need one.
I purchased an Audew , which does not have pass through charging , that is why an inverter was necessary to charge and operate at the same time. That got me thinking what inverter is more efficient? external or internal , which I can do on my own, but thought it would be a good test for other power generators as well , for comparison.
Just bought a fridge for a road trip coming up. I want to keep it running the whole time. It has battery protection built in as well. So all I need to do is cut off the cigarette portion of the plug and run the wires straight to the car battery? Fridge will pull about 40 watts with compressor on, so I also plan to put a 30 amp fuse to be safe. Thank you
Solar generator companies need to start putting in an Anderson or some other locking connector, I installed a Bluesea marine locking cigarette plug... but still feel like it is going to pop out
Excellent video Jason. My go to is using SAE custom adaptors because I last year I bought a whole package of them at Harbor Freight really cheap and I just stuck with that since. A few months ago I tried making my own custom Anderson power pole adapters and unfortunately for me I bought the cheapest option on Amazon and they were totally unusable. Because of that, it turned me off to Anderson, but that's really my fault for going cheap rather than using the recommended links from guys like you. I think I'm going to retry making custom Anderson power pole adapters again using landscape wire as you suggested. Thanks for making this video.
I've bought two 12v electric cables for that very same frig like urs. That 12v connection keeps coming out. Why the heck Iceco kept using that type of 12v socket? There r better quality 12v then that one. My Jackery 1000 only hv 12v & 110 DC outlet to plug my frig into. I'm stuck using that 12v. Using the plug 🔌 would drain my Jackery faster.
most of these "12v compressor fridges" will actually work fine (and more efficiently) on 24v because they all use the same 24rv compressors. that means they will also work on 28v since its within the automotive 24v range (30v max). using 28v, you can run fridges more efficiently with usb-c from a powersupply that supports the new pd 3.1 standard (28v) if you wire in a "28v pd trigger board" which goes into the DC pins on the fridge. almost all those powersupplys with pd3.1 are GaN and will be much more efficient than any other wall based powersupply. i got my 54 liter 12v fridge down to under 100wh/day ($0.01/day here)
Could you install like a freaky battery adapter and use it like a portable battery like you use for all your tools you currently use such as desalt or other name brands that you already have butteries for that way you don’t have to hook up a power station and just carry the portable batteries
Thanks for this instructional! I have no idea what I'm doing. Why no fuse between the fridge and the battery? I originally got a cigarette adapter with a fuse to prevent either component from being destroyed.
I cut my car cable wire in half and wired it directly to a fuse block in my trailer for my first 12-volt fridge I bought, does not work for a power station obviously. It worked the entire 3 months I went on a cross country trip. I have not done it with my other car cable for the 2nd fridge I bought, just so I have one cable for the power station. But I did buy 2-5521 to car charger outlet cables, so i can make one with one of them seeing as I don't need two of them.
Just tried to make this change for the connection of my ICECO VL45Pro to my Jackery 500. Looks like the Jackery DC connection isn't 5521, but 6.5 x 1.4, and I can't seem to find this connection on Amazon? Not sure why the Jackery isn't going with the norm on this? Thanks for any help!
The AC inverter uses background power to convert the battery to AC power. It won't run nearly as long with the AC inverter. It's much more efficient to use the DC power to keep your fridge going.
Is there anywhere to buy this cable? I would love to purchase the DC to xt60 cable to connect my Iceco VL45Pro to the Ecoflow Delta. Fridge throws the E1 error twice before working the 3rd time when connected via the included cigarette lighter to DC cord.
You only are able to power it with the 12v socket or 5521 barrel port with the Ecoflow delta model. The Xt60 port is for charging the power station only.
Hi, what about creating USB type C -> fridge plug cable? USB-C can deliver up to 100W. I have a few big powebanks but can't use them because it has only USBs outputs. How would you do this?
Great Video. I have a question. The vtoman cp3500 cable that connect one power station to a extra/expansion battery. Can that cable be modified to be extended like in this Video?
Yes, it would be possible. You want to use the same wire gauge and all the communication wires would need to match up on that cable. The only worry is that you'll experience voltage drop the longer the cable is.
I have found that on the accessory (cig) plugs there are cheap ones that should be replaced and good ones that hold well in the accessory socket. Usually and more often than not they are equipped with a buss type glass fuse in them. I don't have a power box so I like the universality of the accessory plug.
One more question please..... Is there any way to crimp or solder them without buying another $30 tool? My MC-4 crimper might or might not work. Thanks
They don't have a name, you just need to buy a replacement 12v fridge cable on amazon or Ebay and chop the end off and adapt to your desired connection.
siempre gracias por su reseñas , es todo un lujo aprender,j me gustaria que me sacaras de una duda jasonoid! tengo un panel que compre que me da 28, 5 voltios equivocadamente , pues mi equipo es: energizer320wh/300 w , y solo admite 3 amperios , que debo hacer para que ese panel no supere los 23,5 voltios gracias y un saludo!
I have car fridge 15 L Brass monkey with that end plug and dose not plug into car at all so what do I need I've got a 2017 year car Small one of those new cars out so I need help advice
Hey there! Great video but I have a question. Could you cut off the cig plug and crimp ring terminals on the wires to then run to a 12v fuse box? Instead of creating your own cable.
Jason, I am wondering if I can use the 5521 barrel connection with my Whytner Chest frig DIRECTLY wired into the 12 gage Marine wire in my van's electical system to the fuse box? ie, use it like a 12 v charger socket that would be an outlet in the wall... only it would be the 12 gage wire with the 5521 barrel connection to plug into. Is there sort of "wall mounted port" for a 5521 connection? (like a 12 charger socket?) Thanks very much for your thoughts.
If you search '5521 flush mount' you might be able to find something online. If your fridge pulls under 45 to 50 watts when running it should be fine to use just 5521 as the power connector. If it happens to pull more wattage you might want to look for a better higher wattage solution as 5521 would get fairly warm higher than 50 watts continuous.
@@Jasonoid Thanks for answering so quickly! :) But bummer... My Whytner chest frig pulls 65 Watts. Can I just directly wire the frig to the 12gage wire to the fuse box, and just unplug it at the unit to disconnect? Or is there another alternative that would work instead of the standard charger socket that it comes with? My connection seems like its just really loos and will not keep contact.
I built a little relay box so my fridge automatically switches to direct vehicle power when our van is running. (Conveniently the cigarette lighter on our van is only on when the van is running). It switches to my solar generator battery when the van is off. It also has what is basically a pass-through so the solar battery gets charged when the van is running.
Hey Jason, do you know if any plugs are available that would 90* angle out of the polarized Setpower RV45D in the opposite direction than the cable supplied with the fridge? Thanks again, really appreciate your videos and help 🙂
Which fridge would you recommend to use to use as freezer? As cold as possible that needs to hold 3 trays that are 1”x8”x14” ? Don’t have room in my regular fridge
@@michaeld4502 Both my smaller fridges I own are slightly under 14inches wide so they wont fit those ice trays. The ICECO GO20 and the Setpower FC12. You can go with a larger fridge but it will have extra space.
Can you tell me which pin is the positive on the connector that plugs into the fridge? The one on the bottom of the "B" connector or top? I have all the pieces to make one, I just don't want to wire it backwards and fry anything.
Its best to follow power directly from the 12v cig connector as shown in the video. Center post is positive on the cig connector. Disassemble is and follow the polarity to the fridge connection. One wire will have lettering on it, the other will have a ridge on it.
@@Jasonoid I understand that, but i don't have that wire, I'm making my own. If you could just put a meter on the cable in your video that would tell me. Thanks for the fast reply
@@NickDeubert you'll need to get one if your getting into this stuff haha. When looking at the connector like a B, the top one is the positive, bottom one is a negative.
@@Jasonoid I have a meter, a nice Fluke. What I meant is I don't have the 12v cable that goes with the fridge which is why I couldn't test it myself. Thank you very much for checking that for me.
This is a great idea but I disagree with you about the availability of 10A power through a 5521. I have two power stations and I've been researching a third and have yet to find one with 10A. Isn't the 5521 connector normally rated at 3A? Anyway, I was going to modify one of my old power stations to connect the power port to the 5521, but when I found that the warranty was 5 years, I opted to keep the warranty intact instead. I like the 5521 a lot more than a cig plug.
Hi Jason, not finding a vendor who sells just the 12v power plug (female 2-prong) end for the Iceco fridge to build a custom power cord. would you know where to find this?
@@richardcurrie6043 The red/black connector is an Anderson Powerpole connection. You can see my video about setting them up here: ua-cam.com/video/bZHh3nWXtkw/v-deo.html
@@richardcurrie6043 it has no name, it has no standard, it's just a fridge connector that is used on all these DC fridges. I've searched for years, never found the name of that connector. Sorry Richard. It's not Anderson.
Hey Jason, thanks for your video. I took your advice and got an anderson/5521 cable for my Kings drawer fridge to connect to my Ecoflow river. It works most of the time, but randomly just turns off the DC power port. A suggestion was because the 5521 is only a 3A port whereas the cig lighter port is 10A. Doesn't make sense to me why it would work sometimes and not others if this was the case. But I can't find any other logic, reason or fix. Any suggestions?
@Jasonoid I never tried it with a 12v plug... since then I have developed a massive issue with my Ecoflow which I'm trying to get warranty on, don't know if it's related to this original issue or not. I'll let you know once I'm back up and running, I have a 12v to anderson to try out when it's running again
Not necessarily. It's best to check it yourself, using a multimeter on continuity mode (where it beeps when you have a connection). Then you can simply cut the cable in half, and check the lighter plug end. Strip your wires a bit. Hold one probe against one of the wires, then touch the other probe to the tip, then the ground contacts. The one that beeped is the cable you're holding. See if that wire has ribs, printing, etc, or is bare. Now you know which wire is positive, and which is negative.
Another great video, I'm following your instructions. The only difference with my cord. Is that mine had a 8 amp fuse on the center positive. I'm using Anderson connectors, and created adapters following your logic. I used an inline fuse holder with a 8 amp fuse attached. I'll test it in the morning. Do you feel there's no need for a fuse on your mod cable?
It seems that my fridge is running more efficiently. I have a Goal Zero 1000x. I used it for my fridge this past weekend using the cig plug. I couldn't get a full 7 hours of power before it was almost depleted. It was on ECO mode medium. It seemed to be using more power than at home on AC. I was very surprised and the cig plug felt very very warm so I stopped using it. I wasn't sure what was happening. Using my new mod cable, I have it running for over 8 hours today and the SOC has barely changed. Using around 28 Watts, it had to be the cig plug. The Anderson connector seems to be more efficient. Thanks Again!
Bluetti EB3A and AC180 both use DC7909 for DC input. For the life of me, I can't find any screw in terminals that are DC7909. Anyone have a link? Searches keep suggesting one of those adapters, from 5521 to 7909, but that must cause some drop or be unsafe or something, my brain doesn't like it. I was hoping to upgrade to 14AWG wire so I might just have to order a cord and snip off the end so I can learn a new skill. I'll just keep looking. Thanks for the inspiration!
Like the video. It reminds me to upgrade my soldering equipment. I like the helping hands and a better adjustable unit. Did you just add your own scratch pad or sandpaper, or is that standard on the unit?
Has anyone converted a cable to hook up an external inverter ? I am wondering if a external Bestek 300 watt sine wave would be more efficient than a built in inverter in a power station. ? Seems like a new test could be added when determining / rating power stations .
I did that a few decades ago cause I had 300 watt inverter with only battery clamp cables and wanted to use inverter inside truck. Only used for hour or less each time though.
this would depend on the power stations' battery, if the power station gives a regulated dc output, and not directly from the battery, you will loose more power from the dc-dc conversion. if the power station has a direct to battery dc connection, then using an external inverter that has a higher conversion efficiency may be beneficial. but you will need to do your research. if you are really wanting to use your own inverter, you may wish to go the DIY route.
@@user--PM I purchased an Audew , which does not have pass through charging , that is why an inverter was necessary to charge and operate at the same time. That got me thinking what inverter is more efficient? external or internal , which I can do on my own, but thought it would be a good test for other power generators as well , for comparison
Be sure to check the max amperage and wattage of your power stations 5521 connection. The 5521 capacity on my EcoFlow Delta 2 Max (2048Whr) is only 3A, Max 38W. Most fridges will pull more than 38W. Beware!
@@CraigG21 what I'm saying is that Ecoflow labeled the barrel port as only being able to power 3 amps total, but in reality you'll be able to pull around 100 watts from it without any issues.
If your going to boast your "So called soldering skills" at least do a high quality solder connection. Merge the two wire ends for best connection and strength and then solder. Some sob is going to follow this and wonder why his connection is making heat or worse Fires. Tho I will complement you on your fridge adaptors section
Hey mate great vid. Was just wondering if the writing is always on the positive cable as I'm connecting a Anderson plug on my Waeco and forgot to pull the plug apart first to see which was positive but one does have writing on it and I'm thinking this is the positive Thanks in advance
siempre gracias por su reseñas , es todo un lujo aprender,j me gustaria que me sacaras de una duda jasonoid! tengo un panel que compre que me da 28, 5 voltios equivocadamente , pues mi equipo es: energizer320wh/300 w , y solo admite 3 amperios , que debo hacer para que ese panel no supere los 23,5 voltios gracias y un saludo!
This is by far one of the best solar chargers, dc fridge and everything else in between channel! Got tired of the cigarette cable getting knocked out of my Bluetti by my kid and was wondering if there was a better alternative. Jasonoid to the rescue!
I hate how the default connector for the industry is a connector that was designed to light cigarettes on fire and not really transfer power. We need a new standard! Xt60 or something
I bought an extra cig plug ($20) from ICECO for my GO20. That way I can still use the A/C adapter with the supplied cig cord. I cut the additional cig plug off as you did and installed a right angle 5521 plug. This reduces the risk damaging the plug and socket when installed in my Bluetti EB55. All this gear has survived nicely when bouncing down the road. Thanks for your videos. I used your reviews to select both of these pieces of equipment.
When I first watched this video a several months ago I didn't really understand it, so I glossed over it. Now that I have a bit more knowledge regarding 12V accessories, this video has made so much more sense. I had no idea what APP was prior to checking out the channel. Thanks for making it!
The learning curve is tough, but once you get it down you see the advantages of custom cables! :) Glad you are picking things up!
I recommend heat shrink instead of the tesa tape. Also, if you cut the plus and minus wires to different lengths so you can offset the connection points it makes for less of a bump in the cable, and increases the insulation between the lines.
Anderson powerpoles are awesome!
Instead of? He used both...
@@brianh.000 I Think he meant another heatshrink on top of the heatshrink instead of tape
I've standardized on Anderson Powerpoles for all my 12VDC needs, including portable solar panels. I wish more portable batteries / power stations would use them.
Awesome real life power station tips! having the wrong connector is so frustrating
I do wire soldering differently. This is actually the first time I have seen the "side by side" wires with having the solder itself be the "connection".
Electrons travel on the surface as you know and maybe the system you showed is best/better. I align the wires striped further back and twist them into each other, together in a straight line, not uninsulated wires next to itself with the twisted pair sticking outward from both insulated. Then solder lightly and wrap. I saw the extension with Anderson on both ends... good idea, I'd not thought of that before. Also on that Eb3A a friend ordered one and came by the shop and Bluetti didn't/doesn't give cables to plug in to the solar panel. It would be neat to find the right socket etc. ... we found the number by watching a video and they popped up the number, Bluetti doesn't have it in their manual or documentation. They simply say DC connection... I could not get my Bluetti 120 folding panel to connect. It works great with the Eb55 I use..
although twisting them together will result in a better connection to allow higher amperages with lower heat generation, doing it side by side will work fine if the wire gauge is larger than what is needed.
your method would be better yes, but his method is not "wrong" but less efficient.
fantastic suggestion! I have 2 portable fridges that repeatedly keep losing power because of those flaky cigarette plugs! I have now ordered the barrel connectors and can't wait to fix it once and for all. Thank you so much for this very helpful suggestion.
Glad it was helpful!
Be careful with the 5521 pigtails. I've gotten a bad batch of those that melted at 5 amps. it's never happened with the screw terminal connectors but it did with the pigtails.
The ones I have used here seem to be high quality, lll keep an eye out for heat.
I’ve made a couple of these for solar panels and they make it easy to use any solar panel with any power station. Great video as always.
Just wanted to say thanks for all your great ideas!! I've been following you for a few years now and am I glad I do. It all started for me with the 505 Bilbene and I have just progressed after that. Now I have 14 solar panels our in my yard running the Bilbene 505, 3 Bluetti 200P's, an Oakitel P2001 and an EG4 hand truck setup with a 5000w EG4 server rack battery. I have cut my electric bill down from $300+ a month to under $40. I also got the Iceco 45L for my camping trips and a Silvel diesel heater. I am starting to feel like your clone! Thanks for all your help. Have a Merry Christmas!
That's awesome! I'm glad to hear you're able to save so much on your power bill and you also are prepared for a long term outage.
@@Jasonoid Many thanks to you!
Have a Merry Christmas as well!
This is exactly what I was looking for, thanks so much for the video
Very informative video, Jason. I can sure use this info as I'm a novice with cables and usually buy the usually very expensive ones online. This is a real gem of info for me. Thanks again.
Happy to help Jeff!
Hey J. Do you have same how to but replacing the other end of the cord and the plug attached to the fridge? I got a fridge cord that melted and wondering if I could modify it with those yellow connectors. Thanks much
that is some great soldering skills, and no cold solder joints. its easy to tell when there is a cold solder joint because the color will be muted and less shiny. and you had a good level of solder holding the joints together, not too little and not too much. too little can result in a weaker connection, too much doesn't really matter but you use more material. if you need a high amperage connection, using solder may result in the heat melting the solder and weakening the connection, so using a mechanical connection would be better. of course that also depends on the gauge of the wire. thicker wires can handle more current before getting hot. sorry for the rant there.
as for the tape at the end, i usually use more heat shrink and cover the entire joint with some larger diameter heat shrink. as a suggestion for the outermost heat shrink, you can get weather proof heat shrink, it basically has glue in it, to make the entire joint water tight.
Great tips P M. For the most part these solder joints will be okay for low amp loads. Any high power connections I prefer a crimp / solder combo. Thanks for the feedback, always love hearing your thoughts.
Hey Dr J'
Great vid, very good tutorial on modifying cables!!
Now you have encouraged me to get a soldering kit👍🏽
Ferrules would make the screw terminals a lot more safe. Add a bit of heat shrink over the plastic part of the ferrule (using marine grade heat shrink that is dual wall adhesive) and that adds another way of securing the your little contraption from coming apart because sometimes the cheapo DC power cables don't have quite as many strands as they should and the ferrule doesn't crimp down as tight as it should, I've only come across this once though.
And just to clarify, when crimping ferrules you are crimping the metal tip. There are actually UA-cam videos out there instructing people to crimp the plastic part. I've actually found that crimping the plastic AFTER crimping the metal tip of the ferrule does indeed help secure the ferrule to the insulation of the wire if you're paranoid about the crimp on the raw conductor not being being solid enough.
And this comment wouldn't be complete without soldering criticism! I've been a fan of stripping a tad more insulation and spreading the strands out (kind of like a flower) and shoving them together. Then instead of using thin bus wire or some other wire I use my thinner solder wire to tightly wrap around the joined area. I've already applied some flux to the conductors so combined with the flux inside my solder wire it flows like butter and the wrap stays really tight until the last second but by then part of the wrap has already flown into the wire so I end up with what normally isn't too terribly large of a bulge. I can usually get away with heat shrink that just fits over the wire's insulation also fitting over my splice and blob of solder
Thanks for another great video. Your tips are helping out big time! Keep up the good work.
Again thank you for a great step by step video 😊 The last thing I ever wired was speakers, that’s my comfort level 😂 lol
Can I cut the end of my refrigerator plug off, and wire it to my After market fuse Box that is connected to my truck batteries. The fuse Box i put in, operates a few lights in the back of my Van.
Yes, hardworking these fridges works great too!
@@Jasonoid thanks for the info. My new transit Van automatically shuts off the power sources after about 20 minutes. So I have to figure out a way to keep my refrigerator running as long as I want it to run, not as long as Ford wants it to run.
For my Setpowers. I found that eco mode for my fridge actually uses more power overall because the compressor stays on longer and uses at least 25% more watts overall. If I leave the chest fridge in max mode it uses slightly more watts but shuts off much sooner and stays off longer. I get on the eb3a about 5 extra hours.
Great info, I've always wanted to do more testing to figure out exactly what one is better!
This is awesome and exactly what I want to do! I'm going to go with fridge cable to Anderson. Then I can plug directly into my DIY power station (based off your build!) and then make a 5521 adapter for my retail power stations (Bluetti, Golabs). Great video!!
Glad you liked it Mike! It works really well, especially the Anderson option.
@@Jasonoid Jason, Can I just run the solar cables from panels into my camper to my mppt charge controller, 300 amp hour lifepo4, and 1500 watt inverter to power a small air conditioner without grounding or can it damage something or be dangerous? We have lightning here so the panels will be disconnected before storms or moved inside when I go to town. I don`t want to damage or fry a system that cost over 2000 bucks. Don`t have money to replace an 1100 dollar battery. I can`t find any clear info.
Thanks for this! I stagger my wire length so my splices aren't next to eachother .
Great tip! I try to remember that on my next custom cable!
Excellent TIP!
Why do you prefer the Anderson over SAE. I am looking to wire 12v to the bed of my truck and thinking to do an Anderson or SAE plug in option instead of the cigarette lighter. Any insight would be appreciated.
SAE has no respect to polarity and can get very confusing on which side is positive or negative. It can also be hard to connect and disconnect (especially in cold temps).
I like Anderson because it can't be connected in reverse polarity and it's easy to disconnect and connect. I also like how they are actually rated for specific amps (15, 30 or 45 amp sizes). Sae isn't rated for a specific amp limit so it's a bit questionable on higher loads.
Great answer. Thank you!!
Hoping you can answer my question here :) i have a ICECO VL60 12V fridge/freezer and i am using a Eco-Flow Delta Pro as my power source for a van build, i am using a 12 way fuse box that i bought on amazon, would i be able to cut the 12v plug in that came with my ICECO exposing the wires and hooking them into my 12 way fuse box along with my other 12V item si have attached to the fuse box, maxxair fans x 2 and wall fans x 2.
Yes, you can connect this power cable directly to your fuse box.
And what about installing a recessed plug with a lock-nut? Where can I find that?
I think we'd all like to hear the story behind each of those adapters you made. They're definitely products created from an "experience/situation".
Thanks for this Jason, just now putting together parts for Setpower RV45D adapter to Bluetti EB70 barrel plug... Would there be any significant advantage to using 10-2 wire from West Marine ( marine grade ) or would that just be overkill ... fridge to EB70 cable length will be 6ft. ... EB70 to PV200 solar panel extension cords will be 10ft and 20ft . Also, I'm familiar with 110 and 220 residential electric wiring, not 12 volt wiring, why no third ground wire .. neutral is ground? one way energy flow on live wire? No such thing as a dumb question???
I'm all about safety. Any thoughts on adding one of those inline automotive style fuse enclosures in case anything goes south with the cable or power station? Would a 10a fuse be a good choice?
10 amp fuse would be fine, all fridges have replaceable fuses and the power stations have over current protection, if the stock cable didn't have one, it's also my opinion you don't need one.
I purchased an Audew , which does not have pass through charging , that is why an inverter was necessary to charge and operate at the same time. That got me thinking what inverter is more efficient? external or internal , which I can do on my own, but thought it would be a good test for other power generators as well , for comparison.
Awesome video, been waiting for this one!
Just bought a fridge for a road trip coming up. I want to keep it running the whole time. It has battery protection built in as well. So all I need to do is cut off the cigarette portion of the plug and run the wires straight to the car battery? Fridge will pull about 40 watts with compressor on, so I also plan to put a 30 amp fuse to be safe. Thank you
30 amps? 40 watts at 12v is less than 4 amps, i'd suggest a 5 or 10 amp fuse
Solar generator companies need to start putting in an Anderson or some other locking connector, I installed a Bluesea marine locking cigarette plug... but still feel like it is going to pop out
That would be awesome!
Excellent video Jason. My go to is using SAE custom adaptors because I last year I bought a whole package of them at Harbor Freight really cheap and I just stuck with that since. A few months ago I tried making my own custom Anderson power pole adapters and unfortunately for me I bought the cheapest option on Amazon and they were totally unusable. Because of that, it turned me off to Anderson, but that's really my fault for going cheap rather than using the recommended links from guys like you. I think I'm going to retry making custom Anderson power pole adapters again using landscape wire as you suggested. Thanks for making this video.
@T.J. Kong Thanks Kong!
AWESOMENESS! As usual well done!!
I've bought two 12v electric cables for that very same frig like urs. That 12v connection keeps coming out. Why the heck Iceco kept using that type of 12v socket? There r better quality 12v then that one.
My Jackery 1000 only hv 12v & 110 DC outlet to plug my frig into. I'm stuck using that 12v. Using the plug 🔌 would drain my Jackery faster.
Is it possible to plug this fridge on a powerbank?
As always another great video, Like you I've got several different adapters that I've made lol they worked great.
You can never have enough adapters!
I have the same Car fridge cable, is it possible to replace the car port plug with a usb-c? pluging into a bluetti into the usb-c 100 watt plug?
No, these fridges can't run on USBc unfortunately
most of these "12v compressor fridges" will actually work fine (and more efficiently) on 24v because they all use the same 24rv compressors. that means they will also work on 28v since its within the automotive 24v range (30v max).
using 28v, you can run fridges more efficiently with usb-c from a powersupply that supports the new pd 3.1 standard (28v) if you wire in a "28v pd trigger board" which goes into the DC pins on the fridge. almost all those powersupplys with pd3.1 are GaN and will be much more efficient than any other wall based powersupply. i got my 54 liter 12v fridge down to under 100wh/day ($0.01/day here)
Could you install like a freaky battery adapter and use it like a portable battery like you use for all your tools you currently use such as desalt or other name brands that you already have butteries for that way you don’t have to hook up a power station and just carry the portable batteries
Do the PowerPole connectors have a male and female end, or how do they plug into each other?
They are the same connections for both ends, they just plug into each other upside down. You can't reverse the polarity which is nice too.
Thanks for this instructional! I have no idea what I'm doing. Why no fuse between the fridge and the battery? I originally got a cigarette adapter with a fuse to prevent either component from being destroyed.
The fridge has a built in fuse where you plug in the cable, I don't think you'd need two fuses.
I cut my car cable wire in half and wired it directly to a fuse block in my trailer for my first 12-volt fridge I bought, does not work for a power station obviously. It worked the entire 3 months I went on a cross country trip. I have not done it with my other car cable for the 2nd fridge I bought, just so I have one cable for the power station. But I did buy 2-5521 to car charger outlet cables, so i can make one with one of them seeing as I don't need two of them.
Awesome video and informative; thanks for all you do.
Great stuff. I just purchased the EB3A and a fridge and the 12v plug is driving me nuts. I’ve been looking for a better solution.
Will this work with an ecoflow with 3a max on the 5521? Thx!
Most fridges pull around 35 watts on eco mode, it should be fine.
Just tried to make this change for the connection of my ICECO VL45Pro to my Jackery 500. Looks like the Jackery DC connection isn't 5521, but 6.5 x 1.4, and I can't seem to find this connection on Amazon? Not sure why the Jackery isn't going with the norm on this? Thanks for any help!
Maybe they offer a custom adapter? I'd give them a call and see what options they have.
Hello, why not plug the cable directly into the AC output on the power station? Please let me know if this drains the battery down faster.
The AC inverter uses background power to convert the battery to AC power. It won't run nearly as long with the AC inverter. It's much more efficient to use the DC power to keep your fridge going.
@@Jasonoid
Thanks!
Cigarette lighter socket on the car so how does this help,tyre pump for tyres it gets red hot?
Is there anywhere to buy this cable? I would love to purchase the DC to xt60 cable to connect my Iceco VL45Pro to the Ecoflow Delta. Fridge throws the E1 error twice before working the 3rd time when connected via the included cigarette lighter to DC cord.
You only are able to power it with the 12v socket or 5521 barrel port with the Ecoflow delta model. The Xt60 port is for charging the power station only.
Just what I needed! Thanks for sharing.
This has been a great workaround for me, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
I have Anderson plugs on my battery box, is it ok to put male ends on the fridge cord?
Yep, that would work just fine.
Thank you! Will the 55/21 barrel connector fit the new bluetti ac180 as well?
The new AC180 doesn't have barrel ports, just a 12v socket. Kinda a bummer...
Have you taken a fused plug (cig socket) and not added a fuse back in?
The fridge also has a fuse where the wire connects.
Hi, what about creating USB type C -> fridge plug cable? USB-C can deliver up to 100W. I have a few big powebanks but can't use them because it has only USBs outputs. How would you do this?
I'd love if a fridge would run off USBc!
Great Video. I have a question. The vtoman cp3500 cable that connect one power station to a extra/expansion battery. Can that cable be modified to be extended like in this Video?
Yes, it would be possible. You want to use the same wire gauge and all the communication wires would need to match up on that cable. The only worry is that you'll experience voltage drop the longer the cable is.
inside all cars it seems gig plugs so all good at fridge end but no anderson plugs inside suz so i see lots of issues
My issue was the fridge side. It would overheat and melt the plug. Took it all out and hardwired it. No problems after that!
That's crazy! Glad it's working since your fix.
My Tecknet power stations use the 5525 and 10A.
I have found that on the accessory (cig) plugs there are cheap ones that should be replaced and good ones that hold well in the accessory socket. Usually and more often than not they are equipped with a buss type glass fuse in them. I don't have a power box so I like the universality of the accessory plug.
I do a have few cig plugs that are nicer but I still prefer another connector type over 12v cigs.
One more question please..... Is there any way to crimp or solder them without buying another $30 tool? My MC-4 crimper might or might not work. Thanks
You have to use an Anderson Powerpole crimpers, they are worth it if you decide to use these connections repeatedly.
Want to just make me a fridge to 5521 cable? Or point me where I can buy premade ones for my ICECO fridge?
AMZN has em $12 try DC5521 ConnectorTo DC Power Cord Cabl
Does that plug at the other end that goes into the fridge have a name? I am trying to source that out so i do my own cable. Thanks!
They don't have a name, you just need to buy a replacement 12v fridge cable on amazon or Ebay and chop the end off and adapt to your desired connection.
siempre gracias por su reseñas , es todo un lujo aprender,j me gustaria que me sacaras de una duda jasonoid! tengo un panel que compre que me da 28, 5 voltios equivocadamente , pues mi equipo es: energizer320wh/300 w , y solo admite 3 amperios , que debo hacer para que ese panel no supere los 23,5 voltios gracias y un saludo!
I have car fridge 15 L Brass monkey with that end plug and dose not plug into car at all so what do I need I've got a 2017 year car Small one of those new cars out so I need help advice
I've never seen a fridge that doesn't come with a 12v cigarette plug. What connector does it have?
I would stagger the the solder joints to reduce the chance of arcing. Double the shrink wrap isn't a bad idea either.
very useful video.. Question: what are the actual size of the car "8mm barrel plug".. i've heard its actually 7.9x???
Yeah, they are 7909 connectors, but there are some slight different variations.
Can you run the 12v frig directly into your 12v fuse box?
Yes, you can remove the connector and power it directly. Most fridges also have a built in fuse at the port.
Thanks for the info. I have been looking for this answer for a couple of days.
@@jameshancock4394 lots of other great fridge content on the channel 👍😊
Hey there! Great video but I have a question. Could you cut off the cig plug and crimp ring terminals on the wires to then run to a 12v fuse box? Instead of creating your own cable.
Yep, directly wiring it to battery would work great.
Jason, I am wondering if I can use the 5521 barrel connection with my Whytner Chest frig DIRECTLY wired into the 12 gage Marine wire in my van's electical system to the fuse box? ie, use it like a 12 v charger socket that would be an outlet in the wall... only it would be the 12 gage wire with the 5521 barrel connection to plug into. Is there sort of "wall mounted port" for a 5521 connection? (like a 12 charger socket?) Thanks very much for your thoughts.
If you search '5521 flush mount' you might be able to find something online. If your fridge pulls under 45 to 50 watts when running it should be fine to use just 5521 as the power connector. If it happens to pull more wattage you might want to look for a better higher wattage solution as 5521 would get fairly warm higher than 50 watts continuous.
@@Jasonoid
Thanks for answering so quickly! :)
But bummer... My Whytner chest frig pulls 65 Watts. Can I just directly wire the frig to the 12gage wire to the fuse box, and just unplug it at the unit to disconnect? Or is there another alternative that would work instead of the standard charger socket that it comes with? My connection seems like its just really loos and will not keep contact.
@@WendyDavisPaintings hard wiring it directly to a fuse block will work perfectly!
@@Jasonoid Thank you! I will try that. :)
WHERE DO YOU FIND THOSE GREEN PLIERS..?
These will work:
amzn.to/4dEoXtw
what would be the main advantage of converting the cable to a 5521?
The 12v socket falls out during driving if you hit certain bumps (depends on the quality of the plug). The 5521 is a more secure connection.
@@kkmpp it's a horrible standard that needs to be changed LOL
I built a little relay box so my fridge automatically switches to direct vehicle power when our van is running. (Conveniently the cigarette lighter on our van is only on when the van is running). It switches to my solar generator battery when the van is off. It also has what is basically a pass-through so the solar battery gets charged when the van is running.
Sounds like an excellent system! You got a video on it?
Hey Jason, do you know if any plugs are available that would 90* angle out of the polarized Setpower RV45D in the opposite direction than the cable supplied with the fridge? Thanks again, really appreciate your videos and help 🙂
Which fridge would you recommend to use to use as freezer? As cold as possible that needs to hold 3 trays that are 1”x8”x14” ? Don’t have room in my regular fridge
Are you just wanting to make ice in it? Or do you want to make ice and keep other items frozen at the same time?
@@Jasonoid Freezer 100% no ice just food
@@michaeld4502 Both my smaller fridges I own are slightly under 14inches wide so they wont fit those ice trays. The ICECO GO20 and the Setpower FC12. You can go with a larger fridge but it will have extra space.
Can you tell me which pin is the positive on the connector that plugs into the fridge? The one on the bottom of the "B" connector or top? I have all the pieces to make one, I just don't want to wire it backwards and fry anything.
Its best to follow power directly from the 12v cig connector as shown in the video. Center post is positive on the cig connector. Disassemble is and follow the polarity to the fridge connection. One wire will have lettering on it, the other will have a ridge on it.
@@Jasonoid I understand that, but i don't have that wire, I'm making my own. If you could just put a meter on the cable in your video that would tell me. Thanks for the fast reply
@@NickDeubert you'll need to get one if your getting into this stuff haha.
When looking at the connector like a B, the top one is the positive, bottom one is a negative.
@@Jasonoid I have a meter, a nice Fluke. What I meant is I don't have the 12v cable that goes with the fridge which is why I couldn't test it myself. Thank you very much for checking that for me.
This is a great idea but I disagree with you about the availability of 10A power through a 5521. I have two power stations and I've been researching a third and have yet to find one with 10A. Isn't the 5521 connector normally rated at 3A? Anyway, I was going to modify one of my old power stations to connect the power port to the 5521, but when I found that the warranty was 5 years, I opted to keep the warranty intact instead. I like the 5521 a lot more than a cig plug.
Most fridges pulls 35 watts on ECO mode, which is the mode I use most often, that's about 3 amps or less.
Is it not necessary to put a fuse in the cable?
The fridge has a swappable fuse.
Personally I’d put an xt60 connection where you spliced the wires. That way you could switch between the 5521 and the 12v plug as needed.
I put Anderson PowerPole splices in most of my wiring, XT60 would also work very well.
How about connecting a battery with fuse straight to a 12V fridge?
That would work well also!
@@Jasonoid What size fuse should I use?. Thanks for the videos.
@@rrvallance I would recommend 12awg wire with a 20 amp fuse.
@@Jasonoid Thank you.
Hi Jason, not finding a vendor who sells just the 12v power plug (female 2-prong) end for the Iceco fridge to build a custom power cord. would you know where to find this?
amzn.to/3oTZpBV
just interested in the fridge plug which goes in the fridge....not the 12v cigarette lighter end. is the plug on the fridge an Anderson connection?
@@richardcurrie6043 The red/black connector is an Anderson Powerpole connection. You can see my video about setting them up here:
ua-cam.com/video/bZHh3nWXtkw/v-deo.html
what exactly is the power connector on the ICECO fridge unit itself??
it looks like Anderson? on the fidge iteself....@@Jasonoid
@@richardcurrie6043 it has no name, it has no standard, it's just a fridge connector that is used on all these DC fridges. I've searched for years, never found the name of that connector. Sorry Richard. It's not Anderson.
Hey Jason, thanks for your video. I took your advice and got an anderson/5521 cable for my Kings drawer fridge to connect to my Ecoflow river. It works most of the time, but randomly just turns off the DC power port. A suggestion was because the 5521 is only a 3A port whereas the cig lighter port is 10A. Doesn't make sense to me why it would work sometimes and not others if this was the case. But I can't find any other logic, reason or fix. Any suggestions?
Did you ever have that issue on the 12v socket?
@Jasonoid I never tried it with a 12v plug... since then I have developed a massive issue with my Ecoflow which I'm trying to get warranty on, don't know if it's related to this original issue or not. I'll let you know once I'm back up and running, I have a 12v to anderson to try out when it's running again
Excellent video! Will the positive and negative wires always be as you explained - one with a rough feel and one smooth with lettering?
Not necessarily. It's best to check it yourself, using a multimeter on continuity mode (where it beeps when you have a connection). Then you can simply cut the cable in half, and check the lighter plug end. Strip your wires a bit. Hold one probe against one of the wires, then touch the other probe to the tip, then the ground contacts. The one that beeped is the cable you're holding.
See if that wire has ribs, printing, etc, or is bare. Now you know which wire is positive, and which is negative.
NO! use a multimeter to establish polarity & continuity of your wire.
Another great video, I'm following your instructions. The only difference with my cord. Is that mine had a 8 amp fuse on the center positive. I'm using Anderson connectors, and created adapters following your logic. I used an inline fuse holder with a 8 amp fuse attached. I'll test it in the morning. Do you feel there's no need for a fuse on your mod cable?
The fridge has a fuse already so I didn't double fuse it.
@@Jasonoid Okay! Thanks Again!
It seems that my fridge is running more efficiently. I have a Goal Zero 1000x. I used it for my fridge this past weekend using the cig plug. I couldn't get a full 7 hours of power before it was almost depleted. It was on ECO mode medium. It seemed to be using more power than at home on AC. I was very surprised and the cig plug felt very very warm so I stopped using it. I wasn't sure what was happening. Using my new mod cable, I have it running for over 8 hours today and the SOC has barely changed. Using around 28 Watts, it had to be the cig plug. The Anderson connector seems to be more efficient.
Thanks Again!
@@minceym you were losing lots of power through resistance / heat while using the 12v cigarette plug. It's a horrible connector!
Bluetti EB3A and AC180 both use DC7909 for DC input. For the life of me, I can't find any screw in terminals that are DC7909. Anyone have a link? Searches keep suggesting one of those adapters, from 5521 to 7909, but that must cause some drop or be unsafe or something, my brain doesn't like it. I was hoping to upgrade to 14AWG wire so I might just have to order a cord and snip off the end so I can learn a new skill. I'll just keep looking. Thanks for the inspiration!
This is the adapter I have used for 7909 barrel ports. It works well:
amzn.to/3UptNTU
@@Jasonoid thanks!!
Like the video. It reminds me to upgrade my soldering equipment. I like the helping hands and a better adjustable unit. Did you just add your own scratch pad or sandpaper, or is that standard on the unit?
I believe it is a dampened sponge and not sandpaper.
Yep. It's a wet sponge to clean the tip, came with the soldering kit and works well.
Jason, would you say if all the plugs on the 12v portable refrigerators/freezers are the same type? Are they interchangeable among brands?
If they look similar they are interchangeable, only a few brands use a different style socket.
@@Jasonoid Thanks for the response. Also, great tips on this video!
i would test them to make sure, before just plugging them in, easily done with a multimeter.
Can you use a usb-c connection?
I have seen some USBc to 12v adapters, that might work but I havent tested it. It needs 12v-14v to run properly.
🐾🐾Thanks Jason 😎
Great!👍
Has anyone converted a cable to hook up an external inverter ? I am wondering if a external Bestek 300 watt sine wave would be more efficient than a built in inverter in a power station. ? Seems like a new test could be added when determining / rating power stations .
I did that a few decades ago cause I had 300 watt inverter with only battery clamp cables and wanted to use inverter inside truck. Only used for hour or less each time though.
this would depend on the power stations' battery, if the power station gives a regulated dc output, and not directly from the battery, you will loose more power from the dc-dc conversion. if the power station has a direct to battery dc connection, then using an external inverter that has a higher conversion efficiency may be beneficial. but you will need to do your research.
if you are really wanting to use your own inverter, you may wish to go the DIY route.
@@user--PM I purchased an Audew , which does not have pass through charging , that is why an inverter was necessary to charge and operate at the same time. That got me thinking what inverter is more efficient? external or internal , which I can do on my own, but thought it would be a good test for other power generators as well , for comparison
Be sure to check the max amperage and wattage of your power stations 5521 connection. The 5521 capacity on my EcoFlow Delta 2 Max (2048Whr) is only 3A, Max 38W. Most fridges will pull more than 38W. Beware!
It's labeled 3 amps or 38 watts but it allows the full 10 amp output. Check out my review video where I test the Delta 2 Max extensively.
@@Jasonoid i realize its an “or” statement, but when the EcoFlow screen us reading 40-53W when the fridge is on, its over either way.
@@CraigG21 what I'm saying is that Ecoflow labeled the barrel port as only being able to power 3 amps total, but in reality you'll be able to pull around 100 watts from it without any issues.
@@Jasonoid wow - thanks. I’ll check your vid. Seems like the labeling is quite deceptive (but in EcoFlow’s favor).
Can you use a USB a input for a power source?
No, just 12v or 24v to power the fridge
👍👍👍👍👍
use a merit plug
I lost count of how many times he said basically
If your going to boast your "So called soldering skills" at least do a high quality solder connection.
Merge the two wire ends for best connection and strength and then solder. Some sob is going to follow this and wonder why his connection is making heat or worse Fires.
Tho I will complement you on your fridge adaptors section
No boasting here... LOL
Hey mate great vid.
Was just wondering if the writing is always on the positive cable as I'm connecting a Anderson plug on my Waeco and forgot to pull the plug apart first to see which was positive but one does have writing on it and I'm thinking this is the positive
Thanks in advance
siempre gracias por su reseñas , es todo un lujo aprender,j me gustaria que me sacaras de una duda jasonoid! tengo un panel que compre que me da 28, 5 voltios equivocadamente , pues mi equipo es: energizer320wh/300 w , y solo admite 3 amperios , que debo hacer para que ese panel no supere los 23,5 voltios gracias y un saludo!