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Temperature Gauges - Waeco Fridges
Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 15:13
Justin
Hi,
I have just bought a
Waeco
FF90 from the fridgeshop. It arrived in good condition - but no basket :( It appears to run well and so far I am impressed. I want a temperature gauge and see that there is an
waeco
(http://www.
waeco
.com.au/products.asp?id=170&cat=1) and engel (http://www.spinifex-creations.com.au/keepikool/engel_accessories.htm#edtherm) ones available - which is the best? Does anyone have any idea what sort of end/probe they have, and what is the best way to fix them to the inside of the
fridge
? Do you run the cable straight into the
fridge
through the seal and is the cable thick? If so will cold air escape, or will the gap be too small?
Cheers
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ThreadID:
10915
Replies:
4
Views:
483
FollowUps:
11
This Thread has been Archived
Thread Summary
X
Forum FAQ
AnswerID: 48764 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 15:21
Dave from Fraser Coast 4WD Club
replied: hey justin
I have a
waeco
110
I bought a dick smith dual temp guage and stuck the outside sensor to the roof of the freezer compartment.
Works well
I've also put in two little computer fans, these drop the temp by five degress when in use. (I know, it seems a lot but it really does) and between them they draw half an amp.
I just run them during the day time, and it seems (so far) to make a huge difference to battery life. (it allows me to run the
fridge
on the 1st setting instead of the third.)
Reply 1 of 4
FollowupID: 310557 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 15:59
paul posted:
that sounds right to me, but where did you put them and where did the wiring go ? Camec sells a D cell battery operated fan, runs continuously for about 36 hours on 1 battery, purpose is to circulate the air inside the
fridge
- was made for finch type things but works really well in any static
fridge
set up such as engel and
waeco
. But the old computer fan sounds much better than churning through a D cells every couple of days.
FollowUp 1 of 3
FollowupID: 310560 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 16:16
Dave from Fraser Coast 4WD Club posted:
I have them between the two baskets, one at the top the other about two thirds to the top.
The wire then just ducks out between the two hinges, I probably lose some sealing, but not a great deal!
FollowUp 2 of 3
FollowupID: 310562 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 16:16
Dave from Fraser Coast 4WD Club posted:
I have them between the two baskets, one at the top the other about two thirds to the top.
The wire then just ducks out between the two hinges, I probably lose some sealing, but not a great deal!
FollowUp 3 of 3
AnswerID: 48768 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 16:18
Member - Eskimo
replied: why do you need a thermostat
if its cold its cold...if its got ice on it its frozen...its all relative Wow, am I cute! The extra long legs are built-in prevention against ducks disease. Great looks and a real goer. Doesnt waddle along like some.
Reply 2 of 4
FollowupID: 310575 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 17:13
Roachie posted:
Eskimo,
If you meant "thermometer" instead of "thermostat", I think I know the answer.
I use a Radio Shack inside/outside digital thermometer. The unit sits on my dash and I've added a few feet of cable to the remote sensor so it will reach the ARB
fridge
. I've used the suction cup which came with it to stick to the inside of the lid. I can now be confident the
fridge
has not tripped a fuse/plug come out etc, with the result that the beer is hot!!! I can handle most dilemmas when I'm out
camping
; but warm grog is one I can't put-up with...
A word of advice though.....there is a good deal of difference in the temperature between the top and bottom of the
fridge
. I leave mine on all the time and during the week there are only a couple of bottles of water in there. Although the temp gauge says the temp is about 4 to 5 degrees, mostly the water on the floor of the
fridge
is frozen. I usually keep 1 or 2 bottles in the small basket which is up at lid level and these don't freeze. Obviously, the computer fan idea would alleviate this issue.
Cheers
Roachie
FollowUp 1 of 2
FollowupID: 310582 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 17:45
Member - Eskimo posted:
ooops i meant thermometer
The bottles only freeze as the are in contact with floor I expect. I always run mine as a freezer and alternate plastic bottles to the small esky to keep my beer cold. If the beer does go hot for some unforeseen reason I always have some standby red.Wow, am I cute! The extra long legs are built-in prevention against ducks disease. Great looks and a real goer. Doesnt waddle along like some.
FollowUp 2 of 2
AnswerID: 48793 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 20:15
Richard
replied: Jaycar have an inside/outside
fridge
temperature sensor. In addition when you plug the it into the battery running the
fridge
it will also give you the battery voltage.
Reply 3 of 4
FollowupID: 310604 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 20:29
Viola posted:
Darling the Jaycar goodie number is XC0116
Darling I have had them fitted in my shopping trolley car and the fourbie dear. Absolutely fabulous dear as I can make sure the battery is not going to die on me like the hubby sometimes does
FollowUp 1 of 6
FollowupID: 310615 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 21:04
Roachie posted:
Does the Jaycar one have a backlight which can be connected to truck's instrument panel lights? It would appear to run off the truck's 12 volt system too?
If so, this would be a better option than my Radio Shack one. Mine has a back light, but I have to know where the button is and it stays on for about 5 seconds. It is independant of the truck's electrics and uses one of those button-type watch batteries......I'd much prefer it if it could be connected to 12v.
Cheers,
Roachie
FollowUp 2 of 6
FollowupID: 310641 Submitted: Monday, Mar 01, 2004 at 22:31
Scott_G posted:
the jaycar unit has a decent electronic blue light which comes on from the inbuilt light sensor unit. The clock part runs from two button watch type batteries and the temperature and voltage runs from the 12vDC
i leave mine permanently connected
FollowUp 3 of 6
FollowupID: 310727 Submitted: Tuesday, Mar 02, 2004 at 17:03
joc45 posted:
You lucky buggers - Jaycar are flogging them on special this month (March) for $29.95 - 10 bucks off.
I measured the current draw off the 12v, most of which runs the blue backlight, and it only draws about 20mA; ie it can run for 50 hours before it uses 1AH off your battery, so a permanent connection to your 2nd battery is not out of the question. If in doubt, a switch to isolate it from the 12v would be the go. Go one further and put in a 3-position switch to select either battery, with "off" in the centre. An internal battery backup means that it can measure your temp even if the 12v is switched off.
Gerry
FollowUp 4 of 6
FollowupID: 310751 Submitted: Tuesday, Mar 02, 2004 at 19:44
Justin posted:
Thanks for the great replys. I have just bought a Jaycar one and looks great. The problem I have found is that the temperature wont dispay (work?) unless it has 12v into it. This is a problem if you are running off mains power as the
waeco
transformer outputs 24v. I have got around it by finding an old computer printer 12v power pack and have wired the thermometer to it while it is running inside. Works a treat!
FollowUp 5 of 6
FollowupID: 310998 Submitted: Thursday, Mar 04, 2004 at 15:59
Justin posted:
Works a treat - I spoke to soon! I have compared the digital temp gauge to a analogue gauge and at the lowest setting, 7 on the
waeco
the digital reads -9.5deg and the analogue -13.5deg, 4deg difference! At say -3deg and higher the units seem to read the same though.
Waeco
say that the FF90 will freeze to -15deg, so teh analogue appears right, and it has just been calibrated. Does anyone have this problem with theirs or did I get a dud?
FollowUp 6 of 6
AnswerID: 48841 Submitted: Tuesday, Mar 02, 2004 at 06:55
Matt14
replied: Justin
Ive got an Engel thermometer in my
Waeco
fridge
. Gives internal and outside temps as well as remembering Max Mins for both (I dont know what use that is!). The sensor is about the size of a biro cap and clips onto the basket. The wire is thin enough that it barely effects the seal. So far im happy with it!
Reply 4 of 4
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