Anthony
Well-Known Member
Hi,
Having repaired my boat fridge recently I was nerdy enough to build a data logger (Arduino) and log various temps and the compressor motor cycles over time to check how well it was working, here is a representative chart of its typical operation:

The chart shows a time line from approx 8pm thru the night to 3pm the next afternoon (I have data for a few days but you get the idea).
From top to bottom the traces are:
Red: Condenser (the 'black metal thing' on the back of a fridge, this is where heat is transferred to the outside)
Dark blue: Ambient air temp outside of fridge (fridge was in free open space garage, may get different results when fitted in space in boat)
Green: Ambient fridge air temp (as measured in middle of fridge)
Light blue: Compressor cycle (on / off) - it is typically cycling every minute or two.
Purple: Evaporator (the plate in the fridge that gets cold)
The fridge controller measures the temp of the condenser plate and as you can see it does a reasonable'ish job of switching the compressor on and off to maintain that plate around -7 to -5 ish (control know was set to about middle of the range), however the average fridge temp clearly follows the outside ambient temp up and down, going from about -2 during the night to +2 in the afternoon. Obviously the fridge would benefit from better insulation (but no more room for it). The fridge was also empty, I might run it again with some food in there as I suspect food and drink would help dampen the swing of temps.
Anyway just thought you might be interested to see it, if there is any interest I'll log it again with food to see what difference it makes, or maybe everyone else is happy just drinking the beer from their fridge instead of worrying about how it works and I should go do the same... :very_drunk:
Ants
Having repaired my boat fridge recently I was nerdy enough to build a data logger (Arduino) and log various temps and the compressor motor cycles over time to check how well it was working, here is a representative chart of its typical operation:
The chart shows a time line from approx 8pm thru the night to 3pm the next afternoon (I have data for a few days but you get the idea).
From top to bottom the traces are:
Red: Condenser (the 'black metal thing' on the back of a fridge, this is where heat is transferred to the outside)
Dark blue: Ambient air temp outside of fridge (fridge was in free open space garage, may get different results when fitted in space in boat)
Green: Ambient fridge air temp (as measured in middle of fridge)
Light blue: Compressor cycle (on / off) - it is typically cycling every minute or two.
Purple: Evaporator (the plate in the fridge that gets cold)
The fridge controller measures the temp of the condenser plate and as you can see it does a reasonable'ish job of switching the compressor on and off to maintain that plate around -7 to -5 ish (control know was set to about middle of the range), however the average fridge temp clearly follows the outside ambient temp up and down, going from about -2 during the night to +2 in the afternoon. Obviously the fridge would benefit from better insulation (but no more room for it). The fridge was also empty, I might run it again with some food in there as I suspect food and drink would help dampen the swing of temps.
Anyway just thought you might be interested to see it, if there is any interest I'll log it again with food to see what difference it makes, or maybe everyone else is happy just drinking the beer from their fridge instead of worrying about how it works and I should go do the same... :very_drunk:
Ants