Portable Fridge/Freezer 12v/24v

Pepsi

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Advice required please. I’m looking for recommendations for a portable fridge freezer with 12v and 24v capabilities.

Intended use is within a van via 12v cig lighter socket but I also have access to a massive 240v portable power bank so it must be capable of running off either option.

It has to be capable of chilling items rather than just keeping things at the same temperature as they were when placed into the box. No obvious budget, I’m willing to spend whatever is necessary.

It’s an apparent minefield with options but I only want to buy once so I need to buy right. 👍
 
For your power bank, check the maximum draw it'll allow. My 256WH power bank has a maximum draw of 200W, even with a 3 pin plug. (unless i mis-interpreted your comment about the power bank)
 
Get a compressor fridge, there are some crap fan-only “coolers” that have no true cooling effect, don’t waste your money on them.

WAECO used to be the best refrigerated cool boxes, that Halfords one looks very similar and is a decent price. Most are made by Dometic now anyway. Should be even cheaper if you get a Halfords trade card ?

I’m a fridge tech by profession. I fitted a Dometic CRX50 in my camper van build and the bloody thing is amazing, once down to temperature it hardly runs and only pulls a couple of amps at 12v when running. Works great for days and days off my solar panel by day and leisure battery by night. It’s not “portable” as such as it is built into my vans furniture but the portable units must be similar performance.

I have a Dometic fridge inverter switch-over unit for 240v that kicks out 24vdc to run the fridge from incoming mains when on a mains hookup campsite.

 
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Forgot to add, avoid “absorption” fridges (aka 2-way or 3-way units) which use heat rather than compression to do the work in the fridge cycle by boiling off ammonia from water. They are dog slow, need to be level to work not tilted, and need a vent for the burner if run on butane/propane instead of electric. Not ideal for portable use.
 
For your power bank, check the maximum draw it'll allow. My 256WH power bank has a maximum draw of 200W, even with a 3 pin plug. (unless i mis-interpreted your comment about the power bank)
I'm pretty sure the maximum draw of my power bank is 1040w
 
Get a compressor fridge, there are some crap fan-only “coolers” that have no true cooling effect, don’t waste your money on them.

WAECO used to be the best refrigerated cool boxes, that Halfords one looks very similar and is a decent price. Most are made by Dometic now anyway. Should be even cheaper if you get a Halfords trade card ?

I’m a fridge tech by profession. I fitted a Dometic CRX50 in my camper van build and the bloody thing is amazing, once down to temperature it hardly runs and only pulls a couple of amps at 12v when running. Works great for days and days off my solar panel by day and leisure battery by night. It’s not “portable” as such as it is built into my vans furniture but the portable units must be similar performance.

I have a Dometic fridge inverter switch-over unit for 240v that kicks out 24vdc to run the fridge from incoming mains when on a mains hookup campsite.

Which of these would you recommend?


 
Hmmm.......I can find nothing about the refrigeration specifications of that particular Dometic model, it justs boasts clever electronics in the sales pitch. Its one of the units I am skeptical about.

I wouldn't be interested in its heating function unless I spent time outdoors in winter, how much hot food or soup does one man need ??... (buy a cheap thermos flask or a camping stove if you want heating! ).

The Dometic states max 27 degrees below ambient, which suggests to me either it is not a compressor unit or is so small its performance falls off in high ambient conditions rather than being adequately sized to cope.

The Halfords is specified to work down to -22 degrees so can run as a proper freezer as well as a fridge, unlike the Dometic. It runs on the latest refrigerant R1234YF so is definitely a compressor unit working on the "vapour compression cycle", which is what you want for performance.

On a (rare) 40 degree ambient day you will be drinking warm beer with that particular Dometic and proper cold beer with that Halfords. With that Dometic unit your ice blocks would melt on a warm day, as would your ice cream and your meat would defrost.

Based on a combination of price/performance/physical size/warranty I would almost certainly buy the Halfords cooler if I was in the market for one. Don't be put off that its Chinese made, they all are. (Fridge used to be all Italian stuff but they cant compete with the sheer economy of scale of Chinese production now.)

Whatever unit you decide to buy, get the biggest physical size you can fit/carry/afford as you soon fill these things up, especially with bottles and cans in hot weather. (Top Tip: try to pre-chill stuff overnight in your home fridge before loading the cool box, save it running its nuts off to cool stuff down.)

Some units use a power brick for 240V, some have a built-in transformer..... Pro's and cons to each, but an inbuilt transformer will warm the unit plus if it fails its harder to replace, unlike an external power brick. The Halfords power brick is £15 and can supply 5 amps at 12V. The Halfords Advanced coolbox is 50 Watt, so 4.2 amps at 12vdc.

Looking online, there are also some good refrigerated cool boxes from Outwell.

 
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Thanks everyone for the advice, Halfords model it is. 👍
 
I notice they also do a 10% off offer online with the code MOTORING10 making it £213.75 which is a steal, you can click and collect at a local store.
 
Hmmm.......I can find nothing about the refrigeration specifications of that particular Dometic model, it justs boasts clever electronics in the sales pitch. Its one of the units I am skeptical about.

I wouldn't be interested in its heating function unless I spent time outdoors in winter, how much hot food or soup does one man need ??... (buy a cheap thermos flask or a camping stove if you want heating! ).

The Dometic states max 27 degrees below ambient, which suggests to me either it is not a compressor unit or is so small its performance falls off in high ambient conditions rather than being adequately sized to cope.

The Halfords is specified to work down to -22 degrees so can run as a proper freezer as well as a fridge, unlike the Dometic. It runs on the latest refrigerant R1234YF so is definitely a compressor unit working on the "vapour compression cycle", which is what you want for performance.

On a (rare) 40 degree ambient day you will be drinking warm beer with that particular Dometic and proper cold beer with that Halfords. With that Dometic unit your ice blocks would melt on a warm day, as would your ice cream and your meat would defrost.

Based on a combination of price/performance/physical size/warranty I would almost certainly buy the Halfords cooler if I was in the market for one. Don't be put off that its Chinese made, they all are. (Fridge used to be all Italian stuff but they cant compete with the sheer economy of scale of Chinese production now.)

Whatever unit you decide to buy, get the biggest physical size you can fit/carry/afford as you soon fill these things up, especially with bottles and cans in hot weather. (Top Tip: try to pre-chill stuff overnight in your home fridge before loading the cool box, save it running its nuts off to cool stuff down.)

Some units use a power brick for 240V, some have a built-in transformer..... Pro's and cons to each, but an inbuilt transformer will warm the unit plus if it fails its harder to replace, unlike an external power brick. The Halfords power brick is £15 and can supply 5 amps at 12V. The Halfords Advanced coolbox is 50 Watt, so 4.2 amps at 12vdc.

Looking online, there are also some good refrigerated cool boxes from Outwell.

Those Halfords ones are identical to the Outwell and about 20 other rebranded ones available on Amazon and online.
 
Following on from @Pukmeister
Get a Dometic unit, runs off 12/24 and mains 240
Not cheap but a known make with a good backup.

Try pinging @diplomaticdanny a message as IIRC he's in the leisure equipment game
I’ve got a couple of Waeco boxes I forgot to give back when I left Dometic! Mine go from +5 to -18 and as they are both compressor, take less than an amp an hour to run (when desired temperature reached). That Halfords box looks ridiculously cheap, the Dometic 40ltr would be closer to 3 times that.
 
I’ve ordered the Halfords one for collection later today. Also used the discount code so I only had to pay £202. 👍
 
Get the £15 mains power brick for it too with the money you saved, plus get 10% off that as well with the discount code if its not too late.

£202.50 is an absolute steal !!!
 
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Just so I’m sure what I am looking at, please can someone confirm that this is the recommended Halford’s unit and this is the recommended Halford‘s mains power brick:



Thanks.
 
Just so I’m sure what I am looking at, please can someone confirm that this is the recommended Halford’s unit and this is the recommended Halford‘s mains power brick:



Thanks.
Yes to the first link, no to the second link.
The cooler box as I’ve discovered comes with all the required cables, both 12/24v and 240v 👍
 
Thanks for the advice, just been out and bought the Halfords model posted above. £202.50 and I had a gift card from Fathers Day so £167,50 to me

Just wished I’d read about the power brick first, assumed it would be included. Something to buy later on
 


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