Cooling down the RV? Help
I'm curious if anyone has any tips for how you keep your RV cool. We're going to be traveling around near southern Arizona for the next month (it's 100+ every day, from what I hear). I'd like to find some sort of AC that runs off of DC or can at least be converted I've been checking out a few places online, but I could use some help. A) it needs to be quiet, because I'd like to run it while I'm sleeping. And B), it needs to be relatively affordable, I probably won't be using it again after this trip.... I'm currently looking at the ACs here, they seem the most affordable out there Portable Air Conditioner. Do you guys know anything about any of these? Can I convert them?
Thanks for the help.
I can't imagine how......
......a 12,000 btu alternating current portable air conditioner can be operated from 12 volt direct current storage batteries.
There is probably not a requirement to vent the condensate outside, however, as the portables I've seen have a condensate tank built into the unit, much like a dehumidifier, which in fact an air conditioner is to one degree.
The power required at start-up of even a small air conditioning unit is high enough to dim the lights in a structure or slow the idle speed of a car's engine. Once started, the compressor continues to draw material current, and a fan is then powered to distribute the cooled air. I don't have access to actual numbers, but surely something in excess of 1,500 watts are pulled. An inverter which changes DC current to AC loses much power in the conversion and this power loss passes as a surprising amount of heat released by the inverter unit itself. I think it would require an inverter capable of well in excess of 1,500 watts to start a compressor, and once started, the ongoing power requirement would drain a storage battery, or a bank of batteries, within an hour, if not less.
AC units need far more alternating current power than is normally available from a battery run through an inverter.
Foy