40qt worked for me when I had a truck without a fridge. I just had it on the passenger seat and it was easy to tilt it a bit and drain the ice.
What size cooler for regional work
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by GettingRolling, Dec 9, 2018.
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Someone stuck a piece of hose secured to the drain that would reach outside, just open the door, place the hose and drain it.
I've used a 5 day marine cooler, but I no longer do longer runs, so it stays at home.GettingRolling Thanks this. -
My experience with the Coleman products makes them NOT recommend. Koolatron is a better product for thermoelectric systems. They have both coolers and refrigerator products
More info here: Koolatron Branded Coolers. 12 volt Cool BoxesBean Jr. and austinmike Thank this. -
I used a Koolatron 26 quart when I was out for a week at a time. Worked great for me - had a couple of those 40 qt. Colemans but they didnt last too long.
GettingRolling Thanks this. -
I use the Koolatron P-85 52-qt from Home Depot. Works great!!
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I get that people are for or against electric or standard coolers. I guess the core of what I was looking for was more what size quart wise would be good for 1 person for 5 days.
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The Coleman and many others are 12V coolers. You simply plug it in to a 12V outlet.
No ice to worry about so you have the entire capacity of the cooler for food, and no worries about draining it or getting food soaked in melted ice water.
The most common problem with coolers is the main fan. If that goes it doesn't cool.
And the most common problem with most brands of coolers is that they use a very specific fan. You have to replace it with their own fan because they are an odd size.
The Coleman, however, uses a common computer case fan. 92mm is the installed size, but a 80mm fan will do nearly as well and it is mounted to the heat sink fins. I have even used a 110mm CPU fan.
Most other brands need a specific fan that can only attach to pre-existing mount points.
I have tried a couple other brands, but the Coleman has always been the most reliable for me.GettingRolling Thanks this. -
If you freeze water bottles and drink those as they melt, you can cut down on the ice you have to buy and drain off as it melts. 50 quarts is all I'd want to deal with in a 5 day cooler. If you home after 5 days putting more ice in on the road wouldn't be needed, also, you can use refreezable gel cold packs, you'll still have condensation, but the powered ones have that issue, too.
You can use frozen water bottles in the thermoelectric coolers, too, there are many ways to deal with keeping food and drinks cold, and a.big sleeper makes it easier to accommodate. -
And that all depends on what you are intending to carry over those 5 days.
I can't fit 5 days worth of food in my big Coleman. But then, I would never try to keep fresh meat for that long in any case. I shop at Walmart at least every other day for fresh meat, fish and chicken. Veggies last longer, as do drinks.
But, 5 days worth in one shot? Never.Bean Jr. Thanks this. -
At this point I'm mostly going for stuff to make sandwiches, probably cereal, simple stuff. Not planning on doing much cooking really
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