Beneteau381
Well-Known Member
Made me laugh when we had mountains of R12 filled fridges because the country didnt have the capacity to de gas them! Then when they finally started on them we found out that the evacuated gas was going to India and China for re use!Absorption fridges are very inefficient, and will only offer a holding capability on 12v, and on LPG (butane or propane gas) are positively lethal on a boat because the risk of exhaust fumes re-entering the boat, and possibility of ignition of gas or flammable vapour accumulations from the bilges due to the continuous flame present when operating on LPG.
For any fridge best efficiency is achieved by keeping the discharge pressure down, which is why water cooled condensers in warmer climates are far more effective. Cooling the compressor is less of an issue becuase most of the cooling is provided by the cold suction gas entering.
A well ventilated condenser low down in the boat where the air will naturally be cooler in the Summer will help with an air cooled condenser.
For a cabinet style fridge then a small computer fan along with suitable vents to allow decent air circulation behind the fridge will make a tremendous difference to its efficiency. Installing a fridge into a sealed or poorly ventilated space is a recipe for poor performance and a short life.
As an aside to this thread a mention of HFC phase down, for fridges notably R134a, is something that will affect newer equipment coming to the market over the next couple of years.
With the phase down of R134a it is likely use of propane R290 or Iso butane R600a for boat fridges will increase, and the small volume of refrigerant should not create any undue additional fire hazard for cabinet fridges, but not so sure about split system fridges with locally plumbed systems. An engineer installing such systems must be Gas Safe registered (F Gas registration alone is not valid for pure hydrocarbon refrigerants) plus be suitably experienced with marine fridges. Not too many of those chaps available.
As an alternative to R134a then R1234YF would provide a low flammability solution, but any locally installed system may require a Fire Safety risk assessment (happy to check the specific rules for this as it might be volume related). R513A would provide a non flammable solution.
For those interested in refrigerant developments those with AC systems have a bigger problem. R407C has no replacement in the pipeline at all, as it was a technical replacement for R22, which has now been largely superseded in large systems by R134a equipment. The other common gas used in AC is R410A, which for small systems in being replaced with one of its base components R32, which itself also has a low flammability, and as a result a room size limit. But R410A provides a better heat volume per equipment volume than R134a, which is why R134a is noot much used for AC on boats - the compressors will typically be over twice the swept volume capacity for the same net cooling effect.
Availability of HFC based gases depends upon their Global Warming Potential and the governing factors behind the phase down and its affect upon market price and availability are very complex. This year will see a marked reduction in HFC availability and procurement of new equipment on an HFC refrigerants should be questioned.