*Great with keeping my 1st floor **Fastly.Cool** . Had a little struggle getting it to sit properly in my small window but once I got it situated it works perfectly.*
I drove for Heartland Express. My home terminal was in Phoenix. Trucks idle all night long with temps of 110 at nite. That town is a fucking blast furnace. I Do not miss Phoenix.
I'm sure there are many technicians out there giving their opinion on products, but this is the first to hit my algorithm and I appreciate the technical knowledge. Not to mention, I got a good laugh when he tried to pick up the unit without assistance.
What happens i f I bench test this unit upside down? will it screw up the AC? Does the refrigerant need time to move back down into the proper place when it's turned back up from shipping; say if it's been upside down for a long time?
Been trying to find a comparison video or conversation about this for a minute now… I’m curious, what is the difference(s) between this unit, and your product, the Nomadic Cooling 2000. Names are super similar so sorta confusing 😅 Any info would help in deciding!
I don’t like that the cutout opening is larger than the standard 14x14 of other units. Also don’t like the huge trim piece that will take most of the space sideways and interfere with mounted cabinets. Whenever I build my van I will get your unit instead.
Agreed. It is a huge commitment to cut a non standard size for something so new and unproven. And if you wanted to part out your build you're stick with a non standard hole to cover up.
@@MyGoogleRUclips yeah exactly my point. If later down the road you want to replace the unit with something else or go back to a regular roof fan you have a larger hole that you can’t undo.
Check out the Ben Bodie video I referenced.... looks like you don't need to cut the extra large hole. I really hope Nomadic adds that note to this video. You would think an authorized retailer would have noticed that detail?
Great so I have 2015 Freightliner Cascadia…..how long this unit can be on b4 it’ll kill my battery….should I have different set of batteries 🔋 than the truck has ..I need help I guess
Great question! You will need to add a battery. With a 200ah battery High Cool mode will pull 45amps per hour which lasts a little over 4hrs. On ECO Mode it will pull 19 amps per hour which will last about 10hrs.
This thing looks awesome but with the upward facing fan vents it makes me a little bit worried about using it during a storm or very wet place. Do you think this could be a problem?
Hello man would you be able to share some information about Semi truck installation,is it possible with this thing?.I would like to put this ac on the roof of my semi truck.
Thanks Shekhar! This unit can be suitable for an airstream under the right conditions and purposes. Please give us a call to discuss. 480-576-2489 Thanks for your inquiry.
Unit peak current draw is 58A@12V, which is 696Watts, so 750-1Kw of panels with controller should be able to run it directly. You of course will need more panel if you also wish to charge batteries at the same time…
@@rronmar so my mercedes sprinter 2019 170 extended could handle only 4 250 watts of solar panels with your ac. So what to do now. I want to buy 12 volt ac
@@nabeelkhalid1505 first off, not my A/C, have nothing to do with this product, have just studied the subject extensively for my own needs. There are other smaller units you could use that could probably fit under or inside the vehicle(I know space is a premium in a van build). The cabin air is then ducted down to them to be cooled and sent back up into the cabin. There are several units 300-450w input @12V with variable speed drive compressor, and you could buy 3 possibly 4 of them for the cost of the Dometic unit(search “12V A/C” on amazon). Dometic makes nice stuff, but they have always been closer to the top end of the price spectrum. Having it under the vehicle has some advantages as you can place it closer to the batteries, and it might be easier in your case to find locations to fit 2 smaller units as opposed to one larger unit like this, that would have to take the place of an entire solar panel on your roof. This one seems to have a pretty large footprint. I also kind of like the idea of 2 smaller units for the redundancy factor… The biggest thing that usually trips people up is figuring out how much A/C they need, and there is a whole separate science for that answer…
@@rronmar so, its not that super efficient as they say.. If you need almost 1 kW, to turn this thing On. And it could work like hour and a half, maybe more..
@@dusanradojevic6255 I am sure it is plenty efficient, it is just a larger output than some variable drive units that are out there.. the question was how much power is required to operate it, and it needs 696 watts peak. Since it uses a variable drive it adjusts it’s output and current draw based on how cool it has made the space, so it may draw significantly less current just to maintain an already cooled space… in the end the amount of insulation and air sealing determines the amount of energy consumed by the heating and A/C systems…
Most people use fuel burning furnaces. In sprinters, they tend to mount them under the passenger seat. Me personally, I don’t like the sound of that. Sounds like a fire hazard. But it’s the most popular choice. I’ve heard heating blankets aren’t nearly as big a power draw as a space heater. Not an ideal solution but it’s an idea worth considering. I’m from Florida so I’m not exactly an expert in the matter 🤷♂️
Heat pump is retarded propane heater is so much more efficient. How the hell the people got sold on air to air heat pumps with electric heat strips should be executed.
@@GregariousAntithesis that is true if it is really cold, but for milder temps, the heatpump is an order of magnitude more efficient. In shoulder seasons(a good chunk of your heat required season) some units can have COP’s approaching 9:1 or more, and can maintain fairly high efficiency down into the 30’s (degrees F). At 9:1, That means for every 1KW of electricity consumed, you get 9KW of heating… heat strips are 1:1, so if it gets cold enough that the unit reaches that same COP and it wants to switch to heat strips, then yes a fuel fired heater starts to become more cost effective. The only reason they have strip heaters is so you don’t need 2 separate heating systems. And of course if you also require air conditioning, most heat pumps can also provide that in a single system…
WOW, this is good price at only around $3 thousand for the nice one you have there... I've placed my own order last week. I jus can't wait to have it installed in my Van. My family are very much into playing board games Im thinking about many of the board games we will play while we play some others like Domino's for example... We look forward to Posting a few pictures and videos from our camping outdoors..
No it should need an exact amount of amps to start and a lessor amount to continue to run. How long it needs to run will depend on the temp, but won't change the Amp requirements.
Since it's a 12 volt appliance, if the Honda can keep your 12 volt battery charged up while the AC is running I don't see a problem. Good question, though.
I think that is what it is really designed for, the sleeper compartment on a semi… as you will need 750W of solar or a large battery bank and alt to run it for any length of time… semi’s typically have the larger bank and alt to support something like this…
@@makeitpay8241 yea, depending upon conditions, it may actually go longer as this type varies compressor output/electrical load to match conditions. But then you are in the situation of needing to recharge 400AH of battery bank. To meet acceptance charge requirements for a conventional lead acid battery, you need 25% of the AH capacity in amps out of your charge source, above and beyond what you need to meet any other electrical load, so it can be taxing for a standard automotive alternator. AGM’s need 45%, so you would need a really large alt…
A regular A/C in an RV requires AC electrical power from a hookup or generator. They also have significantly more cooling capacity with all that available power. This unit can run on battery or solar, but it only has 6800 BTU/hr of capacity peak, so it is intended for a very small space, like the sleeper module on a semi truck, or a very small van. It also pulls 58A@12VDC to provide this so it will burn thru a 100AH battery in under 2 hours at full output. It does use a variable compressor drive, so it can use significantly less current to provide less cooling as needed. It’s current draw varies between 10 and 58A. 58A@12VDC is 696 watts, so in direct sun 750W of solar panels should be able to run it directly…
@@rronmar thank you for that very technical answer I should of worded my question differently. What I wanted to know is how the factory a/c in a rv and this one differ in run time with running on batteries only. No shore power and everything else being equal except the A/C units of course.
@@nevysadventuresllc9074 direct DC powered RV A/C units are fairly new in the market. Most all current RV A/C units require AC power to operate from a generator or AC hook-up. To run them on DC, you would require an inverter to create AC power from a DC storage source. They are also typically significantly larger in capacity. This one pulls 696W of DC. A typical RV unit will pull 1800W of AC. Watts are watts regardless of the source, so an inverter running on DC would need to draw that same 1800W from the DC source, plus the inverter losses(10%). So say 2KW. 2KW from a 12V DC source would require 166 amps of current, large battery banks and power panels(2KW worth) and some monster cables, so it is not very practical to run a large AC unit on DC. The direct DC units are more efficient as they don’t have the inverter losses, and they use variable speed compressors so they only run as hard as they need to, not at 100% like Ac powered units do. DC units are starting to find their way into RV’s but the same rules will always apply, watts are watts regardless of the source. A/C units are about 3:1 efficient so if you need 4Kw of cooling(13,600 BTU/Hr) you will need 1.333KW of input power, or 111A@12V. It would be better at 24v or 48V as those two systems would draw 55A@24 or 27A@48v respectively…
Because you don’t have AC power available… In this video, 15A@12V was probably not doing very much cooling… i would suspect most of that current was just the fans running as it’s minimum listed current draw is 10A. This has 2000W of peak cooling capacity, or 6800 BTU/hr. It’s max current draw is 58A or 696 electrical watts. I would assume it would pull that much current at full rated cooling which would indicate a 2.87:1 coefficient of performance(COP). Your 15A @ 120 V unit using 1800W of electricity, if it has the same COP should yield 5100W of cooling, or just over 17,000 BTU/hr of cooling capacity… 6800BTU/HR is not much cooling… This thing is intended for a small space, like a semi cab sleeper. At full output, it is also going to burn thru a 100AH battery in under 2 hours… the beauty of this unit though is it has a variable speed compressor, so it can run quieter and use less energy if less cooling is required…
You don't have to run an AC inverter! I'm sure the inverter is going to consume some power. And if you have a independent solar system, you could live in your RV without a generator running without a inverter running more so off your battery Banks.
Factor 2 pv panels make 200 plus watrs per hour Now hook up 8 200 plus amps each bat And oversized mppt charge controller Remember if want operate over nite Just need more storage batteries Also insulate roof twice James Roberr Seidel vk Gonna get one asap and test this summer long in California Aquasolaramerica Then sell on web If Pass my test
What's this guy's motivation here. This is a great unit, but this guy isn't doing Dometic any favors IMO. The tone is like an info commercial, and this guy probably does videos for any company that will pay him.
@@NomadicInnovations No, the content wasn't confusing. It was a very well-done video. But aren't you a competitor? That's the part I'm confused about...the niceness. But maybe I'm misunderstanding the business model -- cause I guess you sell the Dometic, too, but I thought, for some reason, you had your own product as well.
Ridiculously costly and not particularly effective for the money spent. Don't buy one of these. There are many alternatives that are one third the cost and are more powerful.
@@mayanktyagi5104 Exactly the response that I would expect from a guy that can't do his research. Do not follow his advice. Unsubscribe so you will no longer be mislead by a fool who has more money than sense. Want a better system for more than $2k less? Do your homework.
*Great with keeping my 1st floor **Fastly.Cool** . Had a little struggle getting it to sit properly in my small window but once I got it situated it works perfectly.*
Nice work!
I drove for Heartland Express. My home terminal was in Phoenix. Trucks idle all night long with temps of 110 at nite. That town is a fucking blast furnace. I Do not miss Phoenix.
Larger than 14x14 is a no go for me . Failure by Dometic . So obvious , What were they thinking ? Today the winner is plug and play .
Thank you for your time
thank you :)
I'm sure there are many technicians out there giving their opinion on products, but this is the first to hit my algorithm and I appreciate the technical knowledge. Not to mention, I got a good laugh when he tried to pick up the unit without assistance.
He thinks he’s strong….. he’s wrong 😂
What happens i f I bench test this unit upside down? will it screw up the AC? Does the refrigerant need time to move back down into the proper place when it's turned back up from shipping; say if it's been upside down for a long time?
Been trying to find a comparison video or conversation about this for a minute now… I’m curious, what is the difference(s) between this unit, and your product, the Nomadic Cooling 2000. Names are super similar so sorta confusing 😅 Any info would help in deciding!
WORKING ON VIDEOS NOW TO ANSWER THAT QUESTION, STAY TUNED :)
Lol yea. I’m wondering the same
Can you compare this thing to some of your units? Price, cooling, footprint etc ?
Absolutely! We plan to do that when the weather heats up a bit :)
what power setup do you need to run this all night? Batt and solar...
Sorry that's a complicated question, we will do a video on that soon :)
I may have to get some for my semi trucks
I want to buy it but I am in Florida and i need this to run almost all day would the rtx 2000 run all day long?
Does it have to be mounted level? My pop-up camper roof is hinged at the front so it is tilted when the roof is raised.
20° max IIRC
Is the RTX 2000 a direct replacement for a Coleman Mach-3 roof AC ?
Nice 👍 unit, Does it use inverter compressor and how many BTU’s ?
Thanks 🙏🏼
No it uses a 12v compressor, and each unit has different BTUs please go to nomadiccooling.com for specific information on each unit.
I don’t like that the cutout opening is larger than the standard 14x14 of other units. Also don’t like the huge trim piece that will take most of the space sideways and interfere with mounted cabinets. Whenever I build my van I will get your unit instead.
Agreed.
It is a huge commitment to cut a non standard size for something so new and unproven.
And if you wanted to part out your build you're stick with a non standard hole to cover up.
@@MyGoogleRUclips yeah exactly my point. If later down the road you want to replace the unit with something else or go back to a regular roof fan you have a larger hole that you can’t undo.
Check out the Ben Bodie video I referenced.... looks like you don't need to cut the extra large hole.
I really hope Nomadic adds that note to this video.
You would think an authorized retailer would have noticed that detail?
@@MyGoogleRUclips
It's exactly because they're an authorized retailer that they can't say that, as it doesn't follow dometic's instructions.
Check out Ben Bodie's RTX install video. You don't have to cut the massive non standard hole.
Does this unit extract air? I’m afraid to loose this capability while cooking if I replace my Maxair
We recommend keeping the Maxair as the unit does not extract air. Pairs wonderfully with the Maxair fan.
Will it function as a normal Suck/blow fan and did they stop selling these units? They aren't on Dometics website.
Great question. Does not extract air we recommend pairing with the Maxxair Fan. Available at NomadicCooling.com
Great so I have 2015 Freightliner Cascadia…..how long this unit can be on b4 it’ll kill my battery….should I have different set of batteries 🔋 than the truck has ..I need help I guess
Great question! You will need to add a battery. With a 200ah battery High Cool mode will pull 45amps per hour which lasts a little over 4hrs. On ECO Mode it will pull 19 amps per hour which will last about 10hrs.
@@NomadicInnovations well as u know those rig comes with 4 batteries….so if add new set of 4 200 ea should last me for 8 hours straight
@@oasisauto Awesome! Looks like you’re good to go. I was not aware you already had 800ah.
This thing looks awesome but with the upward facing fan vents it makes me a little bit worried about using it during a storm or very wet place. Do you think this could be a problem?
Not at all, watertight inside.
Is there a drawing of that template so that I can add it to my design?
Question would that bolt to thin aluminum like through the top of
Pickup canopy? Thank you
That shouldn’t be a problem. We’d love to chat about it. Please give us a call. Thanks 👍
Will this fit on a casita travel trailer?
Hello man would you be able to share some information about Semi truck installation,is it possible with this thing?.I would like to put this ac on the roof of my semi truck.
Hello, this is 100% possible. It was originally intended for installation on semi trucks. We would love to help you out.
Please send me your contact info.I am from Chicago, thank you!!!
Great video, thank you!
Can you use this in a 23FB airstream? The AC was upgraded from a 12k to a 15k.
Thanks Shekhar! This unit can be suitable for an airstream under the right conditions and purposes. Please give us a call to discuss. 480-576-2489 Thanks for your inquiry.
CAn this unit be mounted vertically? That would make it perfect for an ultralight travel trailer.
No
How big of a generator will I need to make one of these 12 volt A/C units work for an Ascape camper (half a teardrop or a teardrop cut in half!
These units are battery operated!
I would like to install this on my semi truck. Do you have to take it to the shop for the install? Does it work for a semi truck?
Yes these are actually designed with semi trucks in mind. And depending on your level of skill you can always install the unit yourself.
Can this be used with the goalzero 6000X? If so, for how long?
Question. How much solar system will be required for this ac?????
Unit peak current draw is 58A@12V, which is 696Watts, so 750-1Kw of panels with controller should be able to run it directly. You of course will need more panel if you also wish to charge batteries at the same time…
@@rronmar so my mercedes sprinter 2019 170 extended could handle only 4 250 watts of solar panels with your ac. So what to do now. I want to buy 12 volt ac
@@nabeelkhalid1505 first off, not my A/C, have nothing to do with this product, have just studied the subject extensively for my own needs. There are other smaller units you could use that could probably fit under or inside the vehicle(I know space is a premium in a van build). The cabin air is then ducted down to them to be cooled and sent back up into the cabin. There are several units 300-450w input @12V with variable speed drive compressor, and you could buy 3 possibly 4 of them for the cost of the Dometic unit(search “12V A/C” on amazon). Dometic makes nice stuff, but they have always been closer to the top end of the price spectrum. Having it under the vehicle has some advantages as you can place it closer to the batteries, and it might be easier in your case to find locations to fit 2 smaller units as opposed to one larger unit like this, that would have to take the place of an entire solar panel on your roof. This one seems to have a pretty large footprint. I also kind of like the idea of 2 smaller units for the redundancy factor… The biggest thing that usually trips people up is figuring out how much A/C they need, and there is a whole separate science for that answer…
@@rronmar so, its not that super efficient as they say.. If you need almost 1 kW, to turn this thing On. And it could work like hour and a half, maybe more..
@@dusanradojevic6255 I am sure it is plenty efficient, it is just a larger output than some variable drive units that are out there.. the question was how much power is required to operate it, and it needs 696 watts peak. Since it uses a variable drive it adjusts it’s output and current draw based on how cool it has made the space, so it may draw significantly less current just to maintain an already cooled space… in the end the amount of insulation and air sealing determines the amount of energy consumed by the heating and A/C systems…
Is it must to be installed to roof only?
INTRUCTIONS>JUST ANOTHER MAN'S OPINNION IN WRITING!
Do you think the RTX 1000 can run of a Yeti 1000X?
What kind of crazy omnidirectional compressor is this thing using?
I'm an AC technician and I had no idea this thing existed.
Apparently, according to the comments this system is only horizontal, which is a shame.
Cool... Question: If I replace the roof-top AC/Heat Pump unit on my Sprinter RV with one of these, what are my choices for Heat?
Most people use fuel burning furnaces. In sprinters, they tend to mount them under the passenger seat. Me personally, I don’t like the sound of that. Sounds like a fire hazard. But it’s the most popular choice.
I’ve heard heating blankets aren’t nearly as big a power draw as a space heater. Not an ideal solution but it’s an idea worth considering.
I’m from Florida so I’m not exactly an expert in the matter 🤷♂️
Heat pump is retarded propane heater is so much more efficient. How the hell the people got sold on air to air heat pumps with electric heat strips should be executed.
@@GregariousAntithesis that is true if it is really cold, but for milder temps, the heatpump is an order of magnitude more efficient. In shoulder seasons(a good chunk of your heat required season) some units can have COP’s approaching 9:1 or more, and can maintain fairly high efficiency down into the 30’s (degrees F). At 9:1, That means for every 1KW of electricity consumed, you get 9KW of heating… heat strips are 1:1, so if it gets cold enough that the unit reaches that same COP and it wants to switch to heat strips, then yes a fuel fired heater starts to become more cost effective. The only reason they have strip heaters is so you don’t need 2 separate heating systems. And of course if you also require air conditioning, most heat pumps can also provide that in a single system…
Could you run this off solar only during the day ?
How much area it can cool and how much amp hour it consums
You’re like a cooling version of unbox therapy. Haha
Where can I buy one of these where I can put it on a sleeper on a truck how much does it cost
Hi all information can be found at nomadiccooling.com
WOW, this is good price at only around $3 thousand for the nice one you have there... I've placed my own order last week. I jus can't wait to have it installed in my Van. My family are very much into playing board games Im thinking about many of the board games we will play while we play some others like Domino's for example... We look forward to Posting a few pictures and videos from our camping outdoors..
Will you be selling the 24v version also?
Does this unit recirculate or is it outside air?
Sorry this unit does not recirculate the outside air, it is a closed loop system.
„Look how sexy it is. I could just wrap it like a little baby“ - well yeah.
SO how many amps at 12v does this require?
depends on temp, new video out this week about amps and temp :)
No it should need an exact amount of amps to start and a lessor amount to continue to run. How long it needs to run will depend on the temp, but won't change the Amp requirements.
How did you know my name was Kenneth?
Can the 2000 model be mounted on a wall? I don’t want a hole in the roof, tiny off grid cabin.
SADLY NO :) THE H20 WILL NOT DRAIN CORRECTLY
Let's go
That thing is beautiful 😍 definitely getting this, sorry bank!
Thank you for the kind words :)
I want to review that here on philippines, can you send 1 unit for me
Will this fit on 2007 Honda Odyssey minivan?
NO - it will be too big and heavy for your Honda Odyssey -- it is 70 pounds (32Kg)
Can AC unit be mounted on a wall?
Great question, it cannot be mounted vertically.
How many sq ft would this cool?
Hi there! Depends on many factors but under optimal conditions it keeps our van lifers and semi truck drivers comfortable.
will honda 2200 gen run this ac????
Since it's a 12 volt appliance, if the Honda can keep your 12 volt battery charged up while the AC is running I don't see a problem. Good question, though.
For the price, it should be quality. Time will tell.
I agree!
Power consumption is?
10-58A @ 12VDC or 120-696 watts from idle to the full 6800 BTU/hr of cooling…
BTU 2000 right?
6800 BTU's
is there any reason this will not work on the roof of a semi trick provided that the roof is flat
I think that is what it is really designed for, the sleeper compartment on a semi… as you will need 750W of solar or a large battery bank and alt to run it for any length of time… semi’s typically have the larger bank and alt to support something like this…
@@rronmar four group 31 batteries should do the trick for 10 hours at a time.
@@makeitpay8241 yea, depending upon conditions, it may actually go longer as this type varies compressor output/electrical load to match conditions. But then you are in the situation of needing to recharge 400AH of battery bank. To meet acceptance charge requirements for a conventional lead acid battery, you need 25% of the AH capacity in amps out of your charge source, above and beyond what you need to meet any other electrical load, so it can be taxing for a standard automotive alternator. AGM’s need 45%, so you would need a really large alt…
I would love to know the big differences that this has over the regular A/C unit in an RV.
A regular A/C in an RV requires AC electrical power from a hookup or generator. They also have significantly more cooling capacity with all that available power. This unit can run on battery or solar, but it only has 6800 BTU/hr of capacity peak, so it is intended for a very small space, like the sleeper module on a semi truck, or a very small van. It also pulls 58A@12VDC to provide this so it will burn thru a 100AH battery in under 2 hours at full output. It does use a variable compressor drive, so it can use significantly less current to provide less cooling as needed. It’s current draw varies between 10 and 58A. 58A@12VDC is 696 watts, so in direct sun 750W of solar panels should be able to run it directly…
@@rronmar thank you for that very technical answer I should of worded my question differently. What I wanted to know is how the factory a/c in a rv and this one differ in run time with running on batteries only. No shore power and everything else being equal except the A/C units of course.
@@nevysadventuresllc9074 direct DC powered RV A/C units are fairly new in the market. Most all current RV A/C units require AC power to operate from a generator or AC hook-up. To run them on DC, you would require an inverter to create AC power from a DC storage source. They are also typically significantly larger in capacity. This one pulls 696W of DC. A typical RV unit will pull 1800W of AC. Watts are watts regardless of the source, so an inverter running on DC would need to draw that same 1800W from the DC source, plus the inverter losses(10%). So say 2KW. 2KW from a 12V DC source would require 166 amps of current, large battery banks and power panels(2KW worth) and some monster cables, so it is not very practical to run a large AC unit on DC. The direct DC units are more efficient as they don’t have the inverter losses, and they use variable speed compressors so they only run as hard as they need to, not at 100% like Ac powered units do. DC units are starting to find their way into RV’s but the same rules will always apply, watts are watts regardless of the source. A/C units are about 3:1 efficient so if you need 4Kw of cooling(13,600 BTU/Hr) you will need 1.333KW of input power, or 111A@12V. It would be better at 24v or 48V as those two systems would draw 55A@24 or 27A@48v respectively…
@@rronmar Thank you that was much easier to understand. I appreciate you clarifying.
@@rronmar wow man..thank you for taking you time out and explaining it in so much detail.
what is its price in india
How much is it ?
All prices are online :)
My old ac unit is rated for 15 amps why would i want to go dc at 15 amps?
120 vs 12, 120 volts at 15 amps is 1800 watts, 12 volts at 15 amps is mathematically 180 watts. I'm guessing this has much less cooling though.
Because you don’t have AC power available… In this video, 15A@12V was probably not doing very much cooling… i would suspect most of that current was just the fans running as it’s minimum listed current draw is 10A. This has 2000W of peak cooling capacity, or 6800 BTU/hr. It’s max current draw is 58A or 696 electrical watts. I would assume it would pull that much current at full rated cooling which would indicate a 2.87:1 coefficient of performance(COP). Your 15A @ 120 V unit using 1800W of electricity, if it has the same COP should yield 5100W of cooling, or just over 17,000 BTU/hr of cooling capacity… 6800BTU/HR is not much cooling… This thing is intended for a small space, like a semi cab sleeper. At full output, it is also going to burn thru a 100AH battery in under 2 hours… the beauty of this unit though is it has a variable speed compressor, so it can run quieter and use less energy if less cooling is required…
You don't have to run an AC inverter! I'm sure the inverter is going to consume some power. And if you have a independent solar system, you could live in your RV without a generator running without a inverter running more so off your battery Banks.
What is the weight of this unit?
the amps are fine, but it is very loud
Rattle rattle rattle
For 2000$ I don't think so already sold my legs for the fridge
nothing cheap about van life!
Factor 2 pv panels make 200 plus watrs per hour
Now hook up 8
200 plus amps each bat
And oversized mppt charge controller
Remember if want operate over nite
Just need more storage batteries
Also insulate roof twice
James Roberr Seidel vk
Gonna get one asap and test this summer long in California
Aquasolaramerica
Then sell on web
If Pass my test
Bradley Cooper does Dometic.
UMMMM THANK YOU YOU JUST MADE MY DAY! JONATHAN
ITS SUPPER QUIET !
Small box big price
What's this guy's motivation here. This is a great unit, but this guy isn't doing Dometic any favors IMO. The tone is like an info commercial, and this guy probably does videos for any company that will pay him.
Infomercial
Эхх для лехковой авто и в бюджетном варианте!
Kenneth?
Ken?
"Quality stuff" at NASA prices
para trocker
I was interested until you said GD..
Am I the only one confused by this video?
What part was confusing? I'm here to help?
@@NomadicInnovations No, the content wasn't confusing. It was a very well-done video. But aren't you a competitor? That's the part I'm confused about...the niceness. But maybe I'm misunderstanding the business model -- cause I guess you sell the Dometic, too, but I thought, for some reason, you had your own product as well.
@@NomadicInnovations No address, just a phone number and social media...
@@grigorshukerski4689 who does not have an address?
Ridiculously costly and not particularly effective for the money spent. Don't buy one of these. There are many alternatives that are one third the cost and are more powerful.
Can you name some alternatives please?
@@mayanktyagi5104 I am not in a position to do your homework for you. Good luck. I have done this for $2k less and experience better performance.
Only a fool would spend for one of these inefficient and crazy pricey units. Only a fool. Only a fool.
@@MrBwalendy umm ok
@@mayanktyagi5104 Exactly the response that I would expect from a guy that can't do his research. Do not follow his advice. Unsubscribe so you will no longer be mislead by a fool who has more money than sense. Want a better system for more than $2k less? Do your homework.
This guy is a drama queen, cut BS. My god and get to point, It’s not an audition
Too much BS talking!