This whole game is all about efficiency. Sure, you can throw a bunch of money at it, and brute-force your way into making it work, but where's the fun at in that?
I have been tinkering with ideas on uber-efficient cooling for refrigeration purposes, and have really found that the real kick in the head with a Carnot system is the compressor startup surge.
Aside from that, I like the idea of that 100Wh/day freezer -> fridge conversion Zap! Gotta admit, that one really surprised me. Lucky me, I just happen to have that thing's little cousin to try the idea out on. Thought about it myself actually, before anyone mentioned it, but didn't know exactly what the gains would be, and hadn't yet bothered to try. Apparently much more than I ever imagined. Didn't I see something like 90 seconds of compressor time per hour? WOOHOO!
The Peltier thing is working
very well in the Coleman cooler (2 cu ft), and I thought I was doing very well with that, but the math makes it half as efficient as dude's compressor version, and that thing is more than 4x the size of the Coleman!
It's that damn surge that I can't seem to find a suitable means around... I have a
750W MSW (Schumacher) (1500W "surge") that wants nothing to do with the compressor in my 5 cu footer. Not saying it couldn't be done (for a reasonable compromise), but it's an irritating attribute to say the least!
The LRA on the freezer's label is 12 and some change amps; combine that with the fact that it's MSW, and it aint happening with that inverter. Thats 1500W+ (and that's being 'nice') for a PSW inverter!. Much more for a motor with MSW.
Peltier module cooking along at 9W 24/7? No startup surge, and cools to ~55F (good for soda, beer, whatever... wouldn't use it for perishables). Still working on a reasonably efficient design for these that can reach a deeper cool. Got all kinds of pans in the fire on that one, but some major hurdles in taking it to the next level.
So either way, there are challenges to overcome. Something else to consider: The inverter required to be able to start a compressor will have a higher standby current than the one that could handle keeping it running, which can add rather significantly to your overhead budget. So you also have to compensate for that in the design of your system. Whether it be more panels/battery, or a load sensing inverter (or maybe both).
Another plus to the Peltiers is that there are no conversion losses (ok, much less, ie no inverter) associated with using them; the Coleman chews on a paltry 5V @ 1.8A. A suitably sized buck converter makes gravy out of that!
FWIW
Steve