by patience » Sun 27 Jan 2008, 09:59:40
Update on my new freezer, a 15 cu. ft. GE, from Sam's Club. Cost $372. The Energy Star tag says 357 KWHR/yr. My Kil-A-Watt says that it's using .64 KWHR/day, with it 1/3 full of meat. The first day of freezing that new load wasn't measured, so this is only a steady state condition. This works out to 234 KWHR/yr, a bit better than advertised. If I add a bit for freezing the new load, say up it to 275 KWHR/yr, I get 275 KWHR/yr divided by 15 cu. ft. =18.33 KWHR/yr/ cu. ft.. I hope to improve on the annual performance by moving the freezer to the unheated back porch.
Because our usage will be very near steady state, this is a somewhat fair trial, albeit for only 5 days. That is, we will normally fill it in cold weather when we butcher a beef, and use from it at a slow rate.
The best I recall, the Sundanzer was advertised at about 100KWHR/year on the 8 cu. ft. freezer, which = 12.5 KWHR/yr/cu. ft.. That is, of course, on direct 12 volts, with no inverter efficiency losses. But it would cost me about $1100 plus freight of around $100 = $1200.
When I run my 120v freezer on 12 volts, I lose about 10% in inverter loss with a Harbor freight 2000 watt inverter, running pretty efficiently at only 118 watts draw for the freezer. (Inverters need to be greatly de-rated to be efficient.) The inverter cost $149 on sale. I did correct for a .01 loss in the Kil-A-Watt.
We are planning to get our home off the grid this year, and just placed the order for 4 more 180 watt Evergreen solar panels, another C60 Xantrex charge controller, and a couple more inverters. The plan is to have two complete systems of 4 panels each, feeding 8 Trojan 6volt batteries, or 1440 watts of panels, total. The first system is completed except for mounting the panels, which I won't do on a snowy roof at the moment.
Our computer, with a flat screen monitor, and wireless telephone system draw about 150 watts, except for theHPprinter, which is a hog at 450-600w. That leaves enough for several CFL lights, and capacity for a fridge, if it isn't too greedy. All these figures are preliminary design numbers, with only short run results, but I am encouraged from what I've seen.