by gg3 » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 11:46:58
I'm surprised I missed this topic so far, because I've been doing exactly this experiment and recording the results.
First, re. Trotsky: two significant errors:
1) The fridge isn't the biggest energy consumer in the house; heating & cooling come first, the fridge comes second.
2) Using the stove & oven, "5 - 10 KW per use." Do you mean 5 - 10 KWH? If your cooking appliances (stove, oven, microwave) are using that much per day, that's a hell of a lot more than the fridge, in which case the fridge comes in third in the list.
Energy consumption for cooking is highly variable depending on your cooking habits. One burner on a stove can use 1,500 watts, or 1.5 KW, and if you run it for a half hour that's 0.75 KWH. If you do that every day, that's 273.75 KWH/year. However, power to each burner is controlled by a knob that either varies the power level or varies a thermostat setting. Then there's the oven, which can be another 1,500 watts, and is typically in use for longer periods because baking takes longer than simply boiling water or whatnot.
Ranges are typically connected to 240 volt circuits so you can't plug them into Kill-A-Watt meters; it would be interesting to develop a meter that can measure the actual power consumption over time, of a range. It is possible that a digital "clamp-on ammeter" of the type electricians carry can do this; at least it can show power consumption from moment to moment and you can do your own arithmetic. What you'd do is sit there with a stopwatch and time the duration of each change in the reading on the meter, and do that for the duration of a typical cooking session.
Second, re. Energy Star:
Those ratings are based on a whole lot of embedded assumptions that are based on "typical family usage," and it is difficult to find out, for any given category of appliance, what the assumptions are.
For example, last time I saw a rating on my washer (Danby twin-tub, DTT-420W), it was something like 436 KWH/year. In fact a typical 6 lb. load uses 0.06 KWH (60 watt-hours), so if you do two loads a week, your actual power consumption is only 6.24 KWH/year, not 436 as the ratings claimed. (For a household of four people, you can quadruple that and end up with only 25 KWH/year.) So for this particular machine, the actual performance is from 18 to 70 times (that's "times" not "percent") more efficient than the number that's in ratings (!). And if the ratings are supposed to be factoring in the power consumption for heating water, that does no good for those of us who wash in cold water, or have solar hot water heating.
For fridges, the ratings make assumptions about ambient room temperature (see below), and about the amount of mass present inside the fridge (food being stored), and the number of times per day the door is being opened, and the duration of each opening of the door. These assumptions may have little to nothing to do with how you actually use the fridge.
And so now, finally, onward to fridges....
I've been running the chest fridge experiment for over a year, and having done so, put the units (one for refrigeration and one for freezing) into service at home. They replace a big old fridge, probably 1970s vintage, that came with the place (rental property), that was consuming an estimated 1,400 KWH/year (!) based on Kill-A-Watt readings.
The chest fridge / freezer units, together, consume an estimated 328 to 460 KWH/year based on Kill-A-Watt readings. Why the range...? Because power consumption for refrigeration is very very sensitive to ambient room temperature. This is true for any fridge/freezer. In the summer, the unit has to create a larger temperature gradient between inside and outside, and in the winter, a much lower gradient. If your summer indoor temps are 80 degrees and your winter indoor temps are around 65 (typical for me), you can see how the difference adds up. Right now at about 68 degrees, my units are using a total of about 0.9 KWH/day.
Things you need to know about modifying chest freezers:
One, the factory stock thermostat that comes with the unit is designed for temperatures in the range that freezers use, not fridges. So you will have to find a different thermostat that will give you the correct range.
Two, those little vents on the side, are where the compressor is located. You want to leave a foot of clearance next to those vents so the waste heat from the compressor (it gets very warm) can freely exit to the ambient air. You also want to leave at least 6" of clearance on the other sides and rear of the unit. This does make a difference, and it is significant. It will also make it easier for you to vacuum up the dust bunnies that accumulate around the fridge/freezer:-)
(Speaking of vacuuming, someone should do a power consumption test on those Roomba robots. I'd guess that using one of those very often and using the regular vacuum less often, will be more efficient than using the regular vacuum as often as you normally do.)
Three, putting a small computer cooling fan in the compressor compartment to vent the warm air will reduce power consumption of the compressor, thus making the fridge or freezer more efficient. However, the power consumption of the cooling fan has to be considered, and on balance, it seems to come out about even.
Four, you need a thermometer in the box so you can be sure of the temperature you've achieved.
The ideal temp for a fridge is 34 degrees Fahrenheit to keep food fresh as long as possible; and in no case should it be higher than 40 or your food will go bad in subtle ways that will make you very sick, as in food poisoning. (No, I didn't test this empirically to see when I'd get sick!:-)
A useful temp for a freezer is -1 degree Fahrenheit (that's "minus one," which is "thirty three degrees Fahrenheit below freezing;" not "one degree below freezing" which is "thirty-one degrees Fahrenheit"), and at this temperature, ice cream will be exactly the right consistency: properly frozen and frosty, but easy to scoop, not solid like concrete. Depending on your needs you may set the freezer to a lower temp (e.g. to freeze meat solid), but anything higher will result in premature food spoilage also.
Five, those Kill-A-Watt meters have a margin of error, and this will show your power consumption being higher than it actually is. When you plug in the meter, let the reading stabilize (takes about 20 seconds) and then press the Amps button (second from the left). You will typically see something like 0.01 to 0.05. That means 10 to 50 milliamps of constant power consumption that will add to the KWH readings and throw off your yearly extrapolation.
NOTE, each and every Kill-A-Watt meter is different. Some will consume 0.01 and some 0.03, and some 0.05, when nothing is plugged into them. You need to test the one you are using. Ideal case, let it run for 24 hours with no load, and look at the cumulative KWH reading for that time period, and make note of it so you can subtract it from any tests of items such as fridges that need to be left running for a while to accumulate totals.
In the case of my chest fridges, it was an extrapolated difference (with two Kill-A-Watt meters, one for each unit) of nearly 100 KWH/year, which made it look as if my units were consuming that much more power than they were actually consuming. So you have got to know how your Kill-A-Watt meter performs before you start taking readings.
Five, about other brands. Sunfrost is pretty well the gold standard, and yet they have also come in for some criticism on the blogs. If I recall correctly, the RF-14 unit (mid-sized fridge/freezer) was claimed to have a yearly power consumption of 164 KWH/year. There's also the EcoFridge which comes in around 250 - 300, and is made in Northern Europe, but be aware that this unit is about 7 feet tall. A decent commercial fridge, e.g. Danby or major US brands, will come in at around 400 KWH/year. The chest fridge/freezer combo will come in around (yearly average) 350, which is still quite decent especially for the price.
About the convenience factor: you get used to top-loading very quickly. In fact there's a benefit. When you get something out of one side, you can place it on top of the other side while closing the lid. For example, open the fridge, take out the milk, place it on top of the freezer (as if it's a countertop surface), close the fridge, pour yourself a glass of milk. Having the horizontal space atop the adjacent unit lets you get stuff out and put it back more efficiently.
Six, fridges and kitchens. Building contractors tell me that the entire design of the kitchen is based on the fridge. Not only the layout of the cabinets, but the entire floorplan. If you're replacing a conventional fridge with a chest fridge/freezer combo, chances are you'll have to put one component where your fridge used to be, and the other component elsewhere in the kitchen.
In any case don't put 'em down the basement; carrying food up & down stairs is a pain in the butt and stairway falls are the #1 cause of household injuries.
Last but not least: the chest freezer/fridge combo takes up more space lengthwise, but sticks out less into the room than a conventional fridge. In some floorplans, this will actually work better than a conventional fridge (I've been designing house floorplans recently also).
OK, gotta scoot, back later...