• @artvabas
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    147 months ago

    Accept the battery is DC 🔋and fridge runs on AC🔌

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        And it turns out to be an ac motor in the compressor causing the fridge and the battery to short out If it stalls on a coil. The ac motor burns up with the battery. The electronic, water dispenser, and the ice maker would probably be happy assuming it’s a full bridge rectifier otherwise polarity would matter but most likely wouldn’t break it.

        I’m not an engineer just a guess.

    • @Quadhammer
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      96 months ago

      So just slap a power inverter in there somewhere and you’re good to go

      • @seppoenarvi
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        46 months ago

        To answer the original question, a fridge requires quite a lot of power to operate. Could be 500W. There’s also power loss from the voltage conversion, so you need a battery and an inverter that are able to provide more than that - let’s say 600W. Car batteries are typically 12V lead-acid batteries. 600W means 50 amps from the battery. That’s a huge current. Lead-acid batteries can handle high currents for a short period of time, but high currents have a negative effect on the battery capacity. So my guess is that the fridge could work for a very short period of time.

        • @The_Tired_Horizon
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          46 months ago

          ^THIS^

          Plus to add that modern kitchen stuff like that will throw on the compressor to cool the unit down with up to a surge of 1200w. Usually for 2-3 minutes as it engages the cooling pumps and moves the refrigerant.

          I’ve run fridge freezer units off battery a few times (deep cycle lead acid, lithium/LFP)

        • Atemu
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          46 months ago

          10% worse efficiency > no refrigerator

        • @ikidd
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          26 months ago

          Inverters have gotten pretty efficient. I have one for my house that’s 97.1% efficient.