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Jan 3, 2025
12:22
:24
pm
germ1
All-American
My friend been travel for years in a 5 wheel and he boondocks often, he never me
Mentioned any issues I know he always has a stand alone generator along with the 5 th wheel generator.
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germ1
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germ1
Joined
May 24, 2004
Last login
Jan 4, 2025
Total posts
7,867 (4 FO)
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Messages
Author
Time
How does it work in practice to have a residential 120V fridge in a 5th wheel? Is it a pain to use when dry camping or
cheezedawg
Properly rated
Jan 3, 12:15pm
My friend been travel for years in a 5 wheel and he boondocks often, he never me
germ1
Jan 3, 12:22pm
It makes it difficult
AFPJCoog
Jan 3, 12:57pm
He mention he has 3 way for it to work first option propane second built in ge
germ1
Jan 3, 1:40pm
personally, if I was boondocking a lot, I'd prefer a 12v fridge and solar panels
mang
Jan 3, 12:31pm
The 120v is better than propane and allows more choices. 12v is more efficient
ovalY
Jan 3, 12:40pm
Would the inverter keep the fridge powered while on the road?
cheezedawg
Jan 3, 12:49pm
You can run a 2 way, a 12v or a 120v while driving if you are doing it from batt
ovalY
Jan 3, 12:58pm
By the way, if your rv had a 2 way before then both 12v and 120v should be avail
ovalY
Jan 3, 1:29pm
Dunno- this was just an RV for sale that I looked at yesterday.
cheezedawg
Jan 3, 1:38pm
If I mostly boondock I would not get a 120v. Yes, an inverter can support it but it will drain…
Tokolosh
Jan 3, 12:45pm
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