alternative thinking
Here is a slightly different line of thought. I am a minimalist, and sail a 20'er so take that into consideration when reading my advice.I have always found that with issues of power consumption, the goal is to reduce the demand, not increase the availability. Increasing availability, always costs more, requires more equipment, is more likely to break down and parts are increasingly interdependent on one another to function. For example in your case the panel, sky, regulator, batteries, and fridge must all be working cooperatively to keep your brew cold. Any failure in any one part of the system, and the brew is not cold.Think reducing consumption. You are only there on weekends anyhow, according to your original post, so no need to have the boat keep your brew cold for you. (I use brew here as the example, knowing full well that there are other items you want to keep cold as well, but I'll keep brew as the example). Instead have your home fridge, store, or whereever keep the stuff cold until you need it. Even using a coolatron (12 volt cooler with 115 volt converter) at home to keep your brew cold, only requires your house current. You can keep adding items to your cooler all week as you acquire products to throw into it, or as you think of it. Come the weekend, grab the coolatron, plug it into your car lighter for the trip to the boat, then plug into the 12 volt power outlet on your boat for the weekend. A regular battery will keep that coolatron working all weekend and your brew cold. You won't need a panel, sky, regulator or separate fridge to keep your brew cool. If your battery is not charged by your motor, you could always add a small (15 watt) panel to keep it charged, but we have kept the koolatron going for a 3 day weekend without issue on a friends 24 and 30'er with two people aboard. We also freeze water in gallon milk containers and add them to the ice box (not coolatron) to keep itself and other items cold, (milk, juice, pop, eggs, cheese etc)I am even more of a minimalist on my own 20'er. I use a portable soft sided cooler that I keep my cold essentials in, then slip it into the ice box on the boat. The extra insulation, plus cold packs keeps things cool for the whole weekend. I typically use foods that do not need refrigeration so again reduce the consumption need. Our marina also has cold storage, so I can keep a supply of stuff there from week to week, and have their electrical system keep my stuff cold rather than relying on my boat systems to to that work.