This recent trip was 5 hours drive northwest from Victoria, in the centre of Vancouver Island, amongst the highest peaks and (last remaining) glaciers on the island. The orange dot marks the location of Ralph River, a stunning 'old style' campground with pit toilets and hand pumps, set amongst a rare stand of old growth Douglas Fir and cedar trees in Strathcona Park. The story is that the loggers loved the site so much that they spared it from clear cutting. Ralph River flows alongside the campground and provides easy access to a snow-fed stream, ideal for cooling off during the recent, unusually hot weather.
It was a test of my boondocking gear and revealed the following less-than-ideal capabilities of my 2014 T@B 320 S during extremely hot weather:
- the fridge fan sucks battery, big time. Even with a daily charge with the solar panel, the battery barely kept up. I actually turned off the fridge during the hottest part of the day to conserve battery. The 8-year old fridge runs beautifully, but the fan is on my list to improve/upgrade, although this is first time it has been an issue.
- this was the last trip with the original fantastic fan, which I actually replaced yesterday. It was not spinning freely and also sucked a lot of battery. Hopefully the replacement will be more efficient.
- I broke off one of the prongs of my SAE connector for the solar panel and reverted to direct battery terminal connections. Pain, having to unlock/open the battery box to charge the battery. I'm ordering a new connector plus a spare.
Here are a few photos: me with a 500-year old, recently toppled, 7-foot wide Doug fir that fell in the campground, my T@B in its site with a huge cedar, and some other campers (with consent) showing the size of the trees throughout the campground.
Comments
(Sorry - I can’t upload the picture right now😬)
Have never taken my T@B to Vancouver Island.
Have done several car road trips with forest hikes and quite ocean side town visits. First visit was a USCGC liberty call in 1975 last was a multi-day working freighter 'cruise' that was based on Vancouver Island in 2000. With several long weekend trips in between.
Wonderful place.
Maybe when C-19 is really in the past - - - will visit with the T@B.
TV: '17 Colorado V6 Z71 4x4, Tow Package, GM Brake Controller
Adventures: 54 Nights: 341 Towing Miles 43,780
cheers
Now I see you were talking about the fridge fan. I'm not really sure why the fan would require so much juice. I have two in my fridge (the thermostatically controlled one on the cooling fins, and the manually controlled one in the vent). They are both fans like what you find in electronic equipment, and they draw very little battery power when operating. (Unlike the Fantastic Fan in the roof, which I agree is a bit of a power hog.)
Are yours different? If not, I'd be inclined to suspect something else may be contributing to your battery woes.
I'm pretty sure it was the fridge fan that drained the battery but I cannot be sure. I have 2 battery monitors and they disagree under load: a wireless monitor on the battery and the Renogy solar panel controller. I tend to trust the Renogy because it is on a LifePo4 setting vs the generic battery monitor.
I was running the ceiling fan, but only now and then and as I said, only after it was removed did I realize the degree to which it was not spinning freely. Anyway, the weather is cooling back down now, so hopefully the next trip will be saner.
It's easy enough to tell if you have one of these--look for a little black rocker switch installed in the cabinet face just above the right side of the fridge.
The original thermostatically controlled fan is installed adjacent to the cooling fins on the left side of the fridge, and can only be seen if you remove the plastic cover on the face of the cabinets. It apparently comes on when convective airflow alone is not enough to draw heat off the fins.
I have the Norcold 3163 three-way fridge. I'm not absolutely certain 2014s has the same unit, but it seems likely. Because of the way they were configured, the 3163s would tend to heat up the counter top above the fridge. Ostensibly, the second fan was to remove that heat for comfort purposes, but it is hard to believe it doesn't also contribute to function by pulling more hot air away from the cooling fins. I've considered rewiring my second fan so that it is also thermostatically controlled.
I don't have any electrical abilities, so if/when it gets too hot again, I'll use a USB rechargeable fan blowing directly up into the fridge side panel, mounted on a rubber sleeve to the external vent. It might seem convoluted, but it's just for extreme situations when the one fan isn't keeping up. Maybe one day, I'll get a proper fan mounted in that hole.
The thermostatically controlled fan I mentioned should be mounted up higher than the area shown in your photo, adjacent to the fins and blowing over them. If you don't have one it suggests they were added after 2014 when it may have been determined that convective air flow alone was not enough for proper fridge operation.
But... If you don't have a fridge fan, that brings us back to the question of what is causing your battery to drain so quickly.