RV.Net Open Roads Forum: Beginning RVing: Crock pot question
RV Community | RV News & Reviews | RV Sales | Plan a Trip | RV Clubs & Services | RV Camping DealsRV.net
Open Roads Forum Already a member? Login here.   If not, Register Today!  |  Help

Newest  |  Active  |  Popular  |  RVing FAQ Forum Rules  |  Forum Help and Support  |  Contact

Search:   Advanced Search

Search only in Beginning RVing

Open Roads Forum  >  Beginning RVing

 > Crock pot question

Reply to Topic  |  Subscribe  |  Print Topic  |  Post New Topic  | 
Page of 3  
Prev  |  Next
Flying brick

Nova Scotia

New Member

Joined: 07/11/2008

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/14/08 05:59am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Certainly worth a try...plug in inverter to 12VDC socket in truck...plug in crockpot...watch and wait. Either the fuse in the inverter pops, or it cooks dinner LOL! I'm sure the smells will drive us and the dog nuts...maybe not such a great idea!

wa8yxm

Wherever I happen to park

Senior Member

Joined: 07/04/2006

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/14/08 06:50am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

PackerBacker wrote:

We have a small one and I'm guessing it draws about the same as a coffee-maker or electric kettle.


As I said.. I have a very big one. it's about 1/2 a coffee pot or kettle

(540 watts) I think I've seen them in the 200-400 watt and below classes


Nothin adds excitment like something that is none of your business
John is Near Kenwood TS-2000 housed in a 2005 Damon Intruder 377


StanleyandIris

Louisiana

Senior Member

Joined: 06/17/2007

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/14/08 11:12pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Watts divided by 120 = AMPS

You can use this formula for everything.

Flying brick

Nova Scotia

New Member

Joined: 07/11/2008

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/15/08 04:49am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Why thank you kindly

wa8yxm

Wherever I happen to park

Senior Member

Joined: 07/04/2006

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/15/08 09:30am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

StanleyandIris wrote:

Watts divided by 120 = AMPS

You can use this formula for everything.



WRONG.. That only works on the 120 volt side of life

It's watts divided by VOLTS

And what's more that only works for resistive or DC loads (SUCH as a crock pot or coffee pot) For motors it's something else.. But I'm not going there in this thread.

Flying brick

Nova Scotia

New Member

Joined: 07/11/2008

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/15/08 11:50am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Ok, I'm confused, so I will just leave the crockpot home LOL! I have a little Honda EU3000is that should keep my 13.5 AC going...thats all I care about now

K3WE

Missouri

Senior Member

Joined: 05/24/2005

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/15/08 02:14pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Here's my crack at the answer.

Anything that makes heat uses a good bit of electricity.

Hair dryers and space heaters make a "lot of heat fast" so they suck a good bit of electricity to the point of occasionally tripping a "normal" circuit breaker- particularly if you "double them up".

A crock pot is known for "slow heat". So, it uses less juice, but it's still a healthy dose PLUS THE BIGGE IS THAT WHILE YOUR HAIR DRYER MAY RUN FOR FIVE MINUTES, THE CROCK POT IS GOING FOR 4, 6 OR 8 HOURS. So not a lot ton of juice at any one instant, but it's going to royally kill a battery, or a tank of gas on your generator given it's long "run time".

Sort of like running using your holding tank, with the faucet wide open, or a slow trickle.....Yeah, it's a different amount, but you are still going to wind up empty fairly quickly.

Does this make it less confusing???

wa8yxm

Wherever I happen to park

Senior Member

Joined: 07/04/2006

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/15/08 05:53pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Ok, As I said, My Crock Pot BBQ pit, which is about the largest Crock Pot made, is 540 watts.. Some of them are down around 100-150 watts

That's next to nothing far as your Honda is concerned. It should work just fine

My Prosine 2.0 is loafing at that power level, won't even fire up the fan and the batteries will last for hours.

Heck, my smallest inverter (Well 2nd smallest if I can find the mini job) can run it.. They SIP power.

Flying brick

Nova Scotia

New Member

Joined: 07/11/2008

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/16/08 06:00am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Well, we will figure something out next trip, as we just took possetion of the trailer yesterday, and we are still trying to digest all the info we need to safely get to the campsite and setup and takedown correctly LOL! Quite a learning curve if it's your first experience in a TT...now I' running around looking for alternatives to having to carry a whole bunch of lumber to level our trailer. And BTW, yes the Therma-rest tent ends are sweet! No leaks during torrential downpours for sure LOL! They also take one person about two minutes to setup.

K3WE

Missouri

Senior Member

Joined: 05/24/2005

View Profile

Offline
Posted: 07/17/08 01:23pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

wa8yxm wrote:

Ok, As I said, My Crock Pot BBQ pit, which is about the largest Crock Pot made, is 540 watts.. Some of them are down around 100-150 watts

That's next to nothing far as your Honda is concerned. It should work just fine

My Prosine 2.0 is loafing at that power level, won't even fire up the fan and the batteries will last for hours.

Heck, my smallest inverter (Well 2nd smallest if I can find the mini job) can run it.. They SIP power.


If 150 watts is what you call "sipping power", fine. I agree, it's minimal load on the generator. I just don't want to dismiss that it is a battery drain in the case of an inverter.

Your inverter is going to "sip" whatever wattage being asked to supply, and cooking food with a 150 W crock pot (which will cycle on and off, or running a 100-watt light bulb for several hours off of a deep-cylce battery is going to use a significant chunk of it's capacity.

Actually I agree, your battery will last "for hours". However, there's plenty of posters here who need their battery to last "for days".

I'd just say that the extended use of a heating/cooking appliance uses a lot more juice than a few 12V lights just before bedtime, and if they are one of those multi-day dry campers, I'd beware the crock pot.

* This post was edited 07/17/08 01:42pm by K3WE *

Reply to Topic  |  Subscribe  |  Print Topic  |  Post New Topic  | 
Page of 3  
Prev  |  Next

Open Roads Forum  >  Beginning RVing

 > Crock pot question
Search:   Advanced Search

Search only in Beginning RVing


New posts No new posts
Closed, new posts Closed, no new posts
Moved, new posts Moved, no new posts

Adjust text size:

© 2008 RV.Net | Terms & Conditions | PRIVACY POLICY | YOUR PRIVACY RIGHTS