National Luna Weekender 50 Fridge Installed 9-24-2016
Say what? Did you not already have an ARB fridge?
Why yes I did, since 2007.
But with the ARB fridge you could only use it as a fridge or a freezer, and not both at the same time.
The ARB worked great for camping in fridge mode, and then when we went on just a day run to the mountains I set it to freeze, and I passed out ice cream bars to everyone.
I was all set to upgrade to the newer ARB fridges as it has digital control of the temperature, and a battery cutoff if the battery gets too low.
I had heard of National Luna, but I did not pay too much attention to them.
Then I read an article a few weeks back by Jonathan Hanson of Exploring Overland.
Happy Hour with National Luna
I have a lot of respect for Jonathan and his wife Roseann as they have been into overlanding for quite a long time.
I did the research and watched several YouTube videos which I will embed into my post here later down the thread.
I came to the conclusion if I was going to get a new fridge, it was going to be the dual compartment National Luna Weekender 50.
Now I can have my refrigerated food in one section, and frozen stuff including ice cream bars in another section.
The fridge side has two plastic bins on top of each other, and the freezer section has one deep bin, perfect.
There are a few cons to this fridge, and I will list them now.
* Only Celsius readout, no Fahrenheit reading, but I can use a conversion chart like I did with my older ARB fridge.
* No cigarette lighter style plug, it uses a European/Din style of plug and receptacle, so you will have to install the one supplied and wire it up .
That is all I can think of, I really dig the new fridge.
Paul May at EQuipt1 who I purchased the fridge from recommended not cutting the 12v cord and installing a regular plug, as the one supplied has more metal, thus a stronger current available.
I tapped into my two 12v plugs in the back that Wayne and I installed many years ago.
I used a step drill bit sized at 3/4", and it was the perfect size for the female receptacle supplied with the fridge.
I could not mount it in one of the other 12v receptacle holes as they were about 1" in diameter, hence why I had to drill a new hole.
What I like about the new fridge it has battery management, digital temperature setting, and digital readout of the current temperature.
You use the up/down arrows on the control panel to set the temperature.
If you want it as 3 Celsius, set it to that, and the fridge will power up or power down to that setting, very nice.
Time for the links, pics, and videos I watched.
Links:
National Luna Headquarters in South Africa
The Weekender 50 on Equipt1's site
National Luna Weekender 50-52 Liter Fridge Freezer Mounting Base Plate
Pictures:
Getting to the 12v power
The new plug and receptacle in place
The old Engel fridge mount before I removed it
Sorry, I forgot to take a picture of the new steel mounting plate, so I "borrowed" one from Paul's site
It has four nubs on top that go into the bottom of the fridge, then you slide the fridge towards the drivers seat, and flip those two levers that spring down, and they lock against the aft end of the fridge keeping it in place.
It is not going anywhere, very nice and tight.
Fridge mounted to the steel plate
Lid open showing the two compartments
The freezer section has its own lid too since there is only one outer lid on the fridge.
Rear shot showing the LED light in the fridge
If you power off the fridge, the LED light will still work, and some of the LEDs on the control panel will be lit.
To save your battery from draining, unplug the fridge all the way.
Plenty of room with the lid straight up
I had to mod my old ARB fridge by changing the hinges so the lid would open like this one.
The new ARBs open the log ways, so it would not have opened up all the way.
You can pull the lids off of them, but that is extra work.
Side shot from the passenger side
Open door view from drivers side
Videos from YouTube land
National Luna 50L Fridge Freeze from Paul at Equipt1
National Luna Fridges - How Are They Made?