I have three fridges, small ones, that I turn 90 degrees so the door opens upwards.
A cold one at 42F for meat and dairy. A chilling one at 50F for drinks and produce, and a freezing one at 30F for long term storage. Saves me about 25% electricity consumption annually compared to my old one-in-all unit.
Good info. I think the best plan for those on a budget is to first be able to keep your phone and computer/laptop powered. Then your fridge and microwave.
Excellent explanation thanks for sharing
Very well explained.
Very informative all your videos.Thanks a lot.I"ll buy your book soon!!
Thankyou for the knowledge
Thank you
Newer fridges and freezers have inverters which lessens the surge power when the compressor kicks in.
you store your squash in the fridge? only people that do that also store body parts in the freezer.
Really good video. My fridge "from the 90's" only has 115 volts and 6.5 amps on the label. Volts X Amps = 747.5 watts, However when I plug my Kill-A-Watt meter in I get 121 volts, 1.6 amps and 180 watts at start up and 165 watts running.
I'm not that great at math but trying to figure it all out.
I'm building a 24 volt system with 8 LiFeOp4 batteries and 600 watts of solar panels "per my charge controller" to start. I will probably add another charge controller and 600 more watts of panels. My charge controller is a EpEver 6415 AN and only allows a max of six 100 watt panels for a 24 volt battery bank.
I was hoping you could fill me in on how to do the math. I'm pretty sure I have enough batteries to run the fridge for days. Thank you for any help.
The amp rating is probably the DC rating of the compressor. So your kill a watt meter will be right. I have made a video about sizing your system and charge controller. Make sure to check them out.
Hello, I have some questions. What's the model of your fridge? During all your measurements were you using this device normally? I mean if you used it to do meals and other? And how many energii will my fridge use if it would be used aproximatelly by 12 hours and opened very often (during party all night)? I have to buy fridge and I have many doubts about using energy because I am planning use to this solar system. Thanks for your response.
It's an IKEA fridge. Opened approximately 20 times a day. Opening a fridge is not that bad. Just have a lot of volume in it like water bottles to keep it cool.
@@cleversolarpower So how do you think? How much energy will my fridge use during all day including 12 hours party? How much by 12 hours party and 12 hours normal day when fridge will not be opened. My fridge uses 121kWh per year.
Does the same think applies for an a/c;
I don't have experience with an AC. However the surge still applies, I don't know what the surge multiplier is.
600w Basically nothing my refrigerator about 3kw 24h
How much batteries to run 46w fridge?
46W*8h=370Wh+idle consumption of 1000W inverter = 370Wh+20W*24h=370Wh+480Wh=850Wh*3days autonomy = 2550Wh battery /0.8=3200Wh battery. 3200Wh/12.8V=250Ah @12V
Magic Chef
HMDR1000WE 297 kWh?
115volts, 1.5 amps
Power input 160 W
My calculations are off I guess over the defrost mode
@@cleversolarpower why would energy star rating say 297kWh/yr. Is the 160w with defrost mode on?
Hai Dc Freezer. update pls
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