❄️ Stay Cool, Stay Ahead — Your Ultimate Portable Chill Partner
The Alpicool CF35 is a 32-quart portable car refrigerator/freezer with fast cooling down to -4℉. It features digital temperature control with memory, 3-level battery protection to safeguard your vehicle, and versatile power options (12/24V DC & 100-240V AC). Designed for outdoor enthusiasts and busy professionals, it offers reliable insulation, a spacious interior fitting 48 cans, and convenient LED lighting for easy use on the go.
Brand Name | Alpicool |
Model Info | CF35 |
Item Weight | 28 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 13.6 x 15 x 27.2 inches |
Item model number | CF35 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Capacity | 32 Quarts |
Annual Energy Consumption | 174 Kilowatt Hours Per Year |
Refrigerator Fresh Food Capacity | 30.6 Liters |
Installation Type | Freestanding |
Part Number | CF35 |
Form Factor | Chest |
Special Features | Portable |
Voltage | 12 Volts |
Wattage | 45 watts |
Defrost | Automatic |
Door Hinges | front |
Shelves | 00 |
Material Type | Foam |
Included Components | Handles |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Item Weight | 28 Pounds |
Number Of Doors | 1 |
W**L
Cold cream and frozen fish
I bought this in August 2020. Reviews had been mixed. My experience was very positive. I use mine on my boat and in my van. It works flawlessly on 110 power. It works extremely well with my 100 amp HR lifepo4 battery also. I have it powered by a 100 watt solar panel, which is not always enough. I just purchased a 2nd 100 watt panel though. That should be all I need. What I learned: the fridge is great. I use as a combo fridge freezer. I think it works best that way overall. I set mine at 20F. I add about 4 to 6 prefrozen pint water bottles first. This acts as a "cold battery" to hold the temp down and increase efficiency. I add frozen meats on bottom in Ziploc bags. Then milk, cheese, butter, mayo. Veggies go on top. If you don't have that intermediate layer I recommend putting a light hand towel to protect veggies from freezing on one side. A paper bag might work but probably end up soggy. Towel is perfect. I do this to minimize run time and keep food frozen up to a month. I got this thing to cycle on for only 20 minutes per HR. I figure that's drawing approximately 1.5 amp hrs. If you're using lead acid battery, you won't get more than 2 days, and I can't say that you will be able to recharge as efficiently either, because of their increased resistance at higher capacity. I have lived on the road in my van and it works. But... with only 100 watt solar and 100 amp battery fridge will run on eco mode for about 3 days. You can run into a problem if your battery runs down and the temp rises into 40s for longer than say 12 hrs. The contents will still be safe because the frozen food and ice bottles will keep things cool, even though the thermostat says 45. Just like a cooler. The problem being that as temp comes up, when your battery has recharged, fridge has to run longer to get temp back down, so that can lead to temp spiraling upward as fridge keeps running and drawing down battery. I've actually shut my fridge off at night to conserve power and restarted in morning with full sun. I also have a noco genius 10 amp charger if I need to recharge battery and have access to power. I think I did that once over a month on the road. You can also help things out by adding bagged ice or frozen foods. Common sense tweaking. But with a 2nd solar panel I expect few issues. Don't block the vents either. The unit will shut down to prevent overheating. Overall Im quite happy with this unit. Also, on AC power at my slip this thing just rocks. No issues. Uses less power than a lightbulb. It will even make ice if you put a Ziploc with water on the bottom. Cheaper than a Yeti cooler and no ice unless you want it. Several of my neighbors at the marina have purchased also. If you have some common sense these are a good value, economical to run, easy to clean, durable within reason, perfect for 1 to 2 people. Mine is running right now and I have the Bluetooth app on my phone. I have it set at 28 because I didn't want to freeze some sodas that I put in there. Its reading 31 and the fridge is humming along after 9 months. Happy camper.
I**P
It works well
So far, so good. Took it on a 6 week camping road trip and it never gave any trouble. I have owned it for about 4 months and used it numerous times without issue. It is nice when things work. It was fairly quiet.Minor negatives: the cord can come unplugged from the small transformer box on the cord very easily. In the back of a camping vehicle, with gear getting pulled out, the plug often slipped out. Annoying, since if I did not notice it, the frig went warm very quickly in the summer heat. That is user error, not a product defect, and I just got used to being careful around the plug.Temperature control is unprecise. I used the "eco" setting to preserve battery life and the ice box would almost never hit the set temperature. If I set it for 39, it would only hit 41-44 degrees on the screen. Not a big deal as one can compensate and set lower than needed. The nice thing about the "Eco" setting is it really saves the battery. It was only drawing about 30-35 watts much of the time... and would often shut the compressor off and draw nothing off the battery. If battery life was not an issue, and took it off "Eco" setting, it would drop the temperature to 0 degrees in a hurry, but use 80 watts constantly while doing it. Ambient temperature obviously impacts performance and I was in hot conditions this summer.In summary, yeah, the chain and clip latch as a bit flimsy, but the ice box works and draws little power while doing it. I was glad to have it as I saved about $200 in buying ice for a chest on my 6 week road trip. Now we wait to see how long it lasts -- at this price point, if I get 3-5 years out of it I'll consider it a victory.
M**R
For the price solid mobile electric cooler. Temp control isn't great.
What I like - the price and the weight. My reference electric cooler is the Whynter FM-65G which is like 50% bigger, and like 4x as heavy. We took this cooler on its inaugural run to go chase the eclipse. It kept things cold for the most part. Other reviews mentioned inconsistent temps which I can 100% confirm. Internal temps even after hours of running varied by as much as 10 degrees depending on how recently the chiller had run. The coldest we ever recorded was 2 degrees over our set temp (set to 34, measured 36), but most of the time it ran 5+ degrees over, and before the chiller would kick back on it was running in the low 40s.It keeps things cold while unpowered pretty meh at best. Again, my reference is the Whynter FM-65G which my brother has and brings to all sorts of family events. This cooler is much worse at holding cool than the Whynter. Like, loses 10+ degrees per unpowered hour. In a similar time period the Whynter loses like 2-3 degrees.All that said I like that this is half the price vs the Whynter, and it might literally be 1/4 the weight. I can barely carry the Whynter empty by myself but I could carry the alpicool filled with 4 days of food/drinks no problem. I think if it's important that your food be at a stable temperature, or you might want to have the cooler unpowered for a while, this is not the cooler for you. If you're just looking for a reasonably sized cooler at a decent price to have in the back of your mini-van while you road trip, this is a perfectly function cooler for that role.
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