Momac
Well-Known Member
Provide one 110Ah leisure battery per fridge for every 24hrs that you wish to be stopped without charging batteries.
There is no changing of mind. I don't know what you are on about.
On most boat systems you can turn down the pump speeds to reduce cycling energy wastage and I am suggesting you could improve things if you did that.
They give it as the average consumption. (It's a similar figure to your example below from Dometic fridge manual). Even at 50% duty cycle it would be a huge consumption for such a little fridge.
It ought to be better than the component built marine fridges, but it's still not very good. That fridge is nearly half the size of the Beko but 20% less power, but I doubt the power quoted is correct as it works out at a 27% duty cycle. I suspect these off the shelf fridges don't quote the EC standard test results.
If you run a duty cycle of 1/3 you are cycling twice as often as with a 2/3 duty cycle. That’s my point and of course I don’t know or need to know your pumps speed. Just set it slower is my polite advice, especially if you have long pipe runs with a high refrigerant volume.You said "A fridge should be designed to not cycle frequently as cycling is a cause of considerable efficiency losses, so to run longer at lower pump speeds is the optimum situation. I would suggest a fridge running at 1/3 duty cycle is incorrectly set up and needs a lower pump speed. "
So if it's not meant to cycle frequently, why is a 1/3 cycle wrong ? Especially when the figures you quote for the domestic fridge suggest that's exactly what that one is doing.
Do you know what my pump speed is set to ? I don't need to improve things, my fridge is set to a low temp and is switched on 24/365 It's a very economical fridge and during Summer months my boat is entirely self sufficient in terms of electricity.
Yet you would rather use a DC compressor, which then converts power internally to AC to run the motor? You are going to waste power that way anyway.
There you go again, distorting figures. The domestic fridge you linked t is running a 1/3 cycle to get to the figures you quote. Yet you keep constantly using 2/3 or now 50% cycles for a boar fridge.
Oh right, so your cheap domestic fridge figures are spot on, but marine fridge manufacturers are quoting incorrect figures.
If it was such a great idea to fit domestic fridges, such as the £180 one you link to, why do you suppose all of the boat builders are fitting DC fridges costing several times that ?
If you run a duty cycle of 1/3 you are cycling twice as often as with a 2/3 duty cycle. That’s my point and of course I don’t know or need to know your pumps speed. Just set it slower is my polite advice, especially if you have long pipe runs with a high refrigerant volume.
A DC compressor and an AC compressor are both AC. You just choose how to feed it by buying a DC input or an AC input unit. The compressor does the conversion if needed with a DC input, so your not wanting to use an inverter is not capable of being resolved.
No distortion, the comparison makes my point better. If my marine installation ran slower it would be even worse.
I just picked a random fridge, so as to not over argue with extreme examples. There are much better fridges and if you look at the 4* fridges, my point is made even better and they are still cheaper than marine fridges.
I’m away now. I won’t be able to respond for a while.
By 1/3 and 2/3 do you mean compressor on in the first figure and total time in the second? Running a fridge that is on for 2/3 of the time cannot possibly be more efficient than one that is on for 1/3 of the time. If by efficiency you mean the same as I do, i.e. achieving the desired result with the minimal input of power. My battery bank would not survive 2/3 for one night, whereas at 1/3 it runs the whole summer.If you run a duty cycle of 1/3 you are cycling twice as often as with a 2/3 duty cycle. That’s my point and of course I don’t know or need to know your pumps speed. Just set it slower is my polite advice, especially if you have long pipe runs with a high refrigerant volume.
By 1/3 and 2/3 do you mean compressor on in the first figure and total time in the second? Running a fridge that is on for 2/3 of the time cannot possibly be more efficient than one that is on for 1/3 of the time. If by efficiency you mean the same as I do, i.e. achieving the desired result with the minimal input of power. My battery bank would not survive 2/3 for one night, whereas at 1/3 it runs the whole summer.
Tbh Zing, on this forum it’s a bit of a waste of time trying to argue with Paul as he is an extremely well respected boat expert on all things electric. As Paul says, if your figures are correct why don’t we all use inverters with 230v domestic fridges ? unless I missed it I’d be interested to know what your boat is and your power setup ie. no and size of batteries, solar, generator etcIf you run a duty cycle of 1/3 you are cycling twice as often as with a 2/3 duty cycle. That’s my point and of course I don’t know or need to know your pumps speed. Just set it slower is my polite advice, especially if you have long pipe runs with a high refrigerant volume.
A DC compressor and an AC compressor are both AC. You just choose how to feed it by buying a DC input or an AC input unit. The compressor does the conversion if needed with a DC input, so your not wanting to use an inverter is not capable of being resolved.
No distortion, the comparison makes my point better. If my marine installation ran slower it would be even worse.
I just picked a random fridge, so as to not over argue with extreme examples. There are much better fridges and if you look at the 4* fridges, my point is made even better and they are still cheaper than marine fridges.
I’m away now. I won’t be able to respond for a while.
It's not actually possible to run it longer unless you leave the door open. What I was saying is you have a choice of running the compressor slowly and running it more often in the cooling cycles. In the example I gave, every time the fridge cycles between set points of on and off it will run twice as often if the pump runs twice the time during the cool cycle - a cooling duty cycle of 1/3 of continuous cooling run time will result in twice as many stop start cycles compared to when you run slower to achieve 2/3.By 1/3 and 2/3 do you mean compressor on in the first figure and total time in the second? Running a fridge that is on for 2/3 of the time cannot possibly be more efficient than one that is on for 1/3 of the time. If by efficiency you mean the same as I do, i.e. achieving the desired result with the minimal input of power. My battery bank would not survive 2/3 for one night, whereas at 1/3 it runs the whole summer.
Agree with your quoted typical figure of a boat fridge. I have the Waeco CRX50 fridge and according to my measurements and timmings the annual energy consumption works out at 105kWh ! .As i said, distorted figures.
Try this marine fridge : Dometic CoolMatic CRX 65S - Compressor refrigerator, 57 l, stainless
109 kwh
You are not comparing like for like. For the same heatpump efficiency and insulation efficiency, a smaller fridge will be less efficient as, for its smaller volume, it has a proportionately larger surface area, hence greater heat tranfer.I don't agree. The figures are not distorted and I have quite a good fridge installation as far as marine fridges go. A fridge should be designed to not cycle frequently as cycling is a cause of considerable efficiency losses, so to run longer at lower pump speeds is the optimum situation. I would suggest a fridge running at 1/3 duty cycle is incorrectly set up and needs a lower pump speed. You may also be comparing with an unheated boat in the UK, but which is set up to cope with warmer conditions, so that would be not optimally set up and 'distorted'.
With my figures, I compared like with like on fridge size. I suspect your comparisons are not.
A domestic fridge is 230VAC not 240VAC in the UK.
I would use a decent inverter (92% efficient). What else were you thinking of?
Here's another data point for you, a marine fridge:
Waeco MDC65 Caravan Motorhome Fridge
A domestic fridge, 50% larger in capacity:
UR4584S | Silver | Beko Refrigerator | ao.com
The marine fridge uses 45W average, the domestic unit works out at 15W average and it's 50% bigger.
There’s a test done here, which supports my contention that bog standard mains powered units are the most efficient. Note he didn’t even use an efficient one, so much better results are possible:
I also fill empty spaces with styrofoam chips, you know the stuff you get in packaging. More insulation.A good way to make your fridge more efficient - don't open the door, or not frequently and keep it full.
There’s a test done here, which supports my contention that bog standard mains powered units are the most efficient. Note he didn’t even use an efficient one, so much better results are possible:
Interested to know how you work out that domestic fridges are more efficient?You could something this and measure amps used and hours running:
DC12V-36V Generator Sealed Hour Meter Counter For Boats Trucks Tractors Car s | eBay
Boat fridges are typically very inefficient compared to good domestic equipment. If your unit is tested as working ok and efficiency is your goal, either massively insulate a custom installation, so you hardly need your inefficient cooling or find a way to install a good domestic model.
Really?It's not actually possible to run it longer unless you leave the door open. What I was saying is you have a choice of running the compressor slowly and running it more often in the cooling cycles. In the example I gave, every time the fridge cycles between set points of on and off it will run twice as often if the pump runs twice the time during the cool cycle - a cooling duty cycle of 1/3 of continuous cooling run time will result in twice as many stop start cycles compared to when you run slower to achieve 2/3.
That is where energy is lost and why a longer pump run time, all other things being equal, is more efficient.
"Each time you turn on you have to pump a vacuum, which produces zero cooling" really? A fundemental lack of understanding of the refrigeration cycle!It's not actually possible to run it longer unless you leave the door open. What I was saying is you have a choice of running the compressor slowly and running it more often in the cooling cycles. In the example I gave, every time the fridge cycles between set points of on and off it will run twice as often if the pump runs twice the time during the cool cycle - a cooling duty cycle of 1/3 of continuous cooling run time will result in twice as many stop start cycles compared to when you run slower to achieve 2/3.
Each time you turn on you have to pump a vacuum, which produces zero cooling. That is where energy is lost and why a longer pump run time, all other things being equal, is more efficient.