Of course, one should NOT put warm drinks in a cooler before you take it out. First, fill the cooler with cold drinks, or buy from a convenience store already cold. It takes a tremendous amount of cooling to cool already warm drinks. There is a lot of heat energy stored in water. Water is a heat sink in case you don't know. Water absorbs much more heat energy than air, a lot more. The cooler needs to transfer all that extra water heat to the outside. This will take a lot of watts and time when you are adding heat into the cooler.
If you are on grid and using it for camping, I would pre chill it with some block ice made in cranberry juice bottles, or tupperware containers instead of using power to cool it down.
Good morning. Thank you for this test ban which motivated my purchase of the same model in 35l. however, to be able to benefit from the same cold on both tanks I made a small modification which I share here th-cam.com/video/LXRyxfR5kHw/w-d-xo.html
I have the CF 35....for like 4 yrs
Of course, one should NOT put warm drinks in a cooler before you take it out. First, fill the cooler with cold drinks, or buy from a convenience store already cold. It takes a tremendous amount of cooling to cool already warm drinks. There is a lot of heat energy stored in water. Water is a heat sink in case you don't know. Water absorbs much more heat energy than air, a lot more. The cooler needs to transfer all that extra water heat to the outside. This will take a lot of watts and time when you are adding heat into the cooler.
If you are on grid and using it for camping, I would pre chill it with some block ice made in cranberry juice bottles, or tupperware containers instead of using power to cool it down.
Good morning. Thank you for this test ban which motivated my purchase of the same model in 35l. however, to be able to benefit from the same cold on both tanks I made a small modification which I share here th-cam.com/video/LXRyxfR5kHw/w-d-xo.html