They work, but they're a power hog...
I've got a TE cooler on my boat and it does an 'okay' job, but it pulls nearly 8 amps when it's on so we try not to use it too much. What I've found works well is to cool everything that's going into the cooler at home first (including 1 or 2 one gallon milk jugs full of drinking water that have been previously frozen) before I load it into the cooler. Another trick that seems to work pretty good is to get a piece of dry ice and wrap it in a bunch of layers of newspaper or an old towel and use that for keeping things cold for the first 3-4 days and then once that's gone plug the thing in and let it do its thing. Saves a lot of amps!Now, here's a question for those in the know: I understand the basic idea of the TE (Peltier Effect) system and that it is limited in its ability to cool by the outside ambient air temperature and all that, but couldn't the 'hot side' of the module be cooled with water taken from the lake or ocean? I know it might sound goofy, but what if instead of using 90 degree air to cool the module, you were using 70 degree water? I realize you'd need a small circ pump to move the water, but I wonder what the net gain (if any) in efficiency would be? Just another of my goofball ideas!Jeff