prv
Well-Known Member
The fridge on Ariam is great. Lovely stainless box, good drain arrangement for cleaning, amply powerful, and has a clever two-speed compressor / holding plate system so that it uses motoring time efficiently and minimises battery use in between.
The only problem is that the compressor is located in what would otherwise be a prime stowage locker. So I want to move it.
There is a space under the saloon bunk and outboard of the battery locker which I think it would fit in. The problem is that this is enclosed on all sides by other things, so there wouldn't be much if any ventilation. Obviously this is not good for an air-cooled compressor. I've been pondering various ducts and flues, but it's tricky. It's occurred to me today that the solution may be to use water cooling rather than air cooling.
I don't really want the complexity of a pump-and-piddler solution, so the two alternatives I'm aware of are the dedicated keel cooler block and the equivalent item designed to go onto a seacock in some way (not exactly sure how these fit). The latter is attractive because the galley sink seacock is in this same compartment, but I don't mind drilling a new hole if they have significant drawbacks that mean the dedicated block is better.
The compressor is the ubiquitous Danfoss unit. Presumably more or less any condenser block would be compatible? Is swapping from the air-cooled condenser to the water-cooled one a quick-release plug-and-play type operation, or does it mean emptying and recharging?
How much are the water-cooling blocks, as a rough guide?
To move the compressor, whether or not I switch to water cooling, I'll need to disconnect and reconnect the pipework to the evaporator in the box. These connections are the usual DIY pre-filled kind - can they be disconnected and reconnected without losing (too much) refrigerant, or is it a one-time thing on installation?
Most of this stuff is probably readily googleable, but I know how the forum loves to give its opinion on things
Cheers,
Pete
The only problem is that the compressor is located in what would otherwise be a prime stowage locker. So I want to move it.
There is a space under the saloon bunk and outboard of the battery locker which I think it would fit in. The problem is that this is enclosed on all sides by other things, so there wouldn't be much if any ventilation. Obviously this is not good for an air-cooled compressor. I've been pondering various ducts and flues, but it's tricky. It's occurred to me today that the solution may be to use water cooling rather than air cooling.
I don't really want the complexity of a pump-and-piddler solution, so the two alternatives I'm aware of are the dedicated keel cooler block and the equivalent item designed to go onto a seacock in some way (not exactly sure how these fit). The latter is attractive because the galley sink seacock is in this same compartment, but I don't mind drilling a new hole if they have significant drawbacks that mean the dedicated block is better.
The compressor is the ubiquitous Danfoss unit. Presumably more or less any condenser block would be compatible? Is swapping from the air-cooled condenser to the water-cooled one a quick-release plug-and-play type operation, or does it mean emptying and recharging?
How much are the water-cooling blocks, as a rough guide?
To move the compressor, whether or not I switch to water cooling, I'll need to disconnect and reconnect the pipework to the evaporator in the box. These connections are the usual DIY pre-filled kind - can they be disconnected and reconnected without losing (too much) refrigerant, or is it a one-time thing on installation?
Most of this stuff is probably readily googleable, but I know how the forum loves to give its opinion on things
Cheers,
Pete
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