I think there may be a language issue here. He says "fridge in AC with water cooling," but I can't tell if it's a 120V or 220V AC fridge, or maybe an air conditioner. He must be plugged in, or have a generator.Not questioning your numbers but at 12 volts that would be 166 amps using a 2/0 cable. You should be blowing fuses left and right. My compressor is wired to a 10 amp breaker using #12 wire.
That is normal.Hello,
On my hunter I have a fridge in AC with water cooling. This type of compressors usually takes usually a 100W. In my boat it takes close to 2000W (yes two thousand. What could be the reasons of such an overconsumption ?
What gauge or meter are you looking at to see the present 1,000 watt loading on the compressor. Are you reading the same output gauge or meter when you saw the 100 watt load ?I had the same compressor on my other Hunter and consumption was one hundred watt not one thousand. What can it be wrong with my system, that would increase the consumption in such a way ?
His is 220 volt so it would be 200 wattsWhat gauge or meter are you looking at to see the present 1,000 watt loading on the compressor. Are you reading the same output gauge or meter when you saw the 100 watt load ?
I can't see 100 watts running a compressor but 1000 watts does seem a little high.
I just stuck my nose inside our refrigerator and this is what I see for its draw :
View attachment 218606
115 volts X 3.5 amps = 403 watts for a 22 cubic foot freezer/refrigerator without a cooling water pump. Is there any way of checking the amperage draw on your cooling water pump alone ?
Can't follow the math on that calculation.His is 220 volt so it would be 200 watts
Yes the amperage would be half for his 220 V supply but the wattage would always be the same regardless of the supply voltage. Of course we can't put just any voltage into the same compressor but you get the idea. The work input to the compressor (measured in watts) will always be the same, regardless of the supplied voltage.If the same unit was 220 volts, the amp rating would be 1/2 of what is on your label.
Sorry, meant to say amps not watts in my previous.Yes the amperage would be half for his 220 V supply but the wattage would always be the same regardless of the supply voltage. Of course we can't put just any voltage into the same compressor but you get the idea. The work input to the compressor (measured in watts) will always be the same, regardless of the supplied voltage.
And that information along with $2.50 will get you a cup of coffee in most restaurants.