A/C in a cuddy cabin

family affair

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 31, 2010
Messages
1,437
Reaction score
339
Points
83
Location
Ohio
Model
Islander
The unit itself has some potential. You'll need a lot of lipo to make that work off a battery.
What brand?
 

wahoo33417

GreatGrady Captain
Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
1,233
Reaction score
240
Points
63
Location
West Palm Beach, FL
Model
Sailfish
Nice find. I'll echo Family Affair and ask what brand?

I wouldn't expect 2500 btu's to do much during the day, but may do the job after sundown.

Keep us posted.
 

greauxpete

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2021
Messages
121
Reaction score
111
Points
43
Age
51
Location
Tha Bayou (Youngsville, LA)
Model
Islander
Family/Wahoo,

I found it on alibaba:

https://m.alibaba.com/x/AxEWUb?ck=pdp

I could not find a unit with this cooling capacity for under $600, so I took a gamble. The unit came damaged but I managed to fix it and it functions. I may return it if it does not cool off the cuddy at night during the summer.

It definitely won't make a dent during the day, my intent is to use it after dark only.
 

family affair

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 31, 2010
Messages
1,437
Reaction score
339
Points
83
Location
Ohio
Model
Islander
So is the price shown on the link correct?
I see wally world has a 5k BTU that is about 35 lbs and 45bd for under $200. Ive wondered if I could make a platform for the walk around to blow it into the port cabin window.
My wife and I have a few more years before overnighting will be a more common option, so I haven't attempted it yet. But you can! :)
 

wahoo33417

GreatGrady Captain
Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
1,233
Reaction score
240
Points
63
Location
West Palm Beach, FL
Model
Sailfish
Greauxpete: In case your unit doesn't work out the way you hope. I'll offer an 'off-the-wall' idea. I'm good at those ;).

I saw in Home Depot what struck me as one of the smallest window AC units I've seen. It was a Toshiba offered in both 5,000 and 6,000 btu's at same dimensions, similar weights and prices.

Here are specs:

AC.jpg

IF it fits in your fridge space, then would need to solve where it draws air from. Ideally, you want it to draw air from the cabin as far from the intake as you can.

But I suspect the area behind your fridge could draw air all the way to your head holding tank and maybe even gas tank. So the challenge would be if those areas can largely be cut off from circulation. If so, then you just need an intake vent to the area behind the fridge.

And you may need a condensation tray that drains to the bilge or to the shower sump.

Like I said, and off-the-wall idea. A lot more work, but a lot more cooling power.

Since its 110 volt, could install a 100 receptacle below the helm. It has the male end facing outside and a short female end on the inside of the bulkhead.
 
  • Like
Reactions: airmanjun10