We have a 2009 Hunter 33. It was purchased new a last year. The refrigerator operation has been poor, at best. At first we thought it was a bad refrigerator. The dealer had it sent back to the factory and it tested out with no problem. I reinstalled it this spring (putting a fan under it to circulate more air through the compartment) and it ran good until the weather started to warm. We just came back from 10 days out and it got so bad about consuming electricity we finally had to shut it down and put ice blocks in it to keep it relatively cool. The freezer ran fine.
Anyway it seems that the refrigerator consumes lots of power and when we run the engine to recharge the battery the heat from the engine transmits to the refrigerator which makes it work harder. The refrigerator compartment is right next to the engine compartment.
Has anyone else experienced this and, if so, what did you do. I want to insulate the wall between the engine and refrigerator compartments but the heat transmits thru the bilge then the refrigerator compartment and finally exits thru the lazarette.
It seems to be a catch 22. Run the engine to recharge the battery, the heat from the engine makes the refrigerator work harder which consumes the battery.......:cry:
Anyone have any suggestions?
Anyway it seems that the refrigerator consumes lots of power and when we run the engine to recharge the battery the heat from the engine transmits to the refrigerator which makes it work harder. The refrigerator compartment is right next to the engine compartment.
Has anyone else experienced this and, if so, what did you do. I want to insulate the wall between the engine and refrigerator compartments but the heat transmits thru the bilge then the refrigerator compartment and finally exits thru the lazarette.
It seems to be a catch 22. Run the engine to recharge the battery, the heat from the engine makes the refrigerator work harder which consumes the battery.......:cry:
Anyone have any suggestions?