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Hard to know for sure. But absorption-type refrigerators, the kind most RVs have, are slow and can struggle. High ambient temps are not their friend. And placement in a slide can hamper their operation because of ventilation issues.
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Bill LeMosy
2001 Volvo VNL 610 with Smart car bed
2013 Smart for Two Passion
2007 New Horizons Summit 38, MorRyde IS and pin, Dexter disks
"There is no path. Paths are made by walking." – Spanish poet Antonio Machado
Depending upon the initial inside temperature of the fridge, 4 hours isn't unusual before you start to temps reaching the level you want. Do you have a small fan inside the fridge - that helps circulate the cool air around and will get the warm air to move up to and around the fins.
Barb
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Barb & Dave O'Keeffe
2002 Alpine 36 MDDS (Figment II), 2018 Ford C-Max HYBRID
After setting up at a site, and put the refrigerator on, it takes up to 4 hours to get cold. What do you think. Should it take that long.
jt
A solution:
Run the propane function for the fridge while you're driving.
Or:
Run the 12 volt on it while you're driving. - I can't vouch for the 12 volt method, though. - Never used it. - I always ran the propane setting while traveling, and the freezer stayed frozen.
What "12 volt" system are you talking about? If you have a frig that runs off of 12 volt batteries it must be an older one. Ours is just 120V or propane for heating the ammonia solution. All of them have 12 volt DC requirements for the circuit board, etc.
Barb
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Barb & Dave O'Keeffe
2002 Alpine 36 MDDS (Figment II), 2018 Ford C-Max HYBRID
I had a 3 way fridge. It ran off of 110 volt, propane, and 12 volt. The 12 volt was hooked to the motorhome battery. - I didn't like it because I was told the 12 volt function drew a lot of power off the motorhome battery. So I always ran the propane to keep the fridge cold while in travel. Yes the motorhome I had was a 1984 or something.
I'm amazed that there's no 12 volt function on newer motorhomes now!
After setting up at a site, and put the refrigerator on, it takes up to 4 hours to get cold. What do you think. Should it take that long.
jt
We usually turn the fridge on 24 hours before leaving home to make sure the fridge is working properly and to keep food from spoiling while on the road.
"Unlike a freon unit, a gas refrigerator does take longer to start up. In high temperatures, it is possible for the unit to vapor lock during start up. Once started, it should operate properly after that."
4 hours is pretty good on getting a fridge to cool.
We turned ours on November 30 2012. It's never been off long enough to warm up since. It's either on propane or on electric at a campsite.