Turtle,
I was looking over the Camping World site, and saw they have many a selection of roof mounted A/C units that run on 115 AC.
My question is, could one of those work with the right battery pack and inverter set up? Some even have a heat strip that can be added as well.
Thanks in advance!
First and foremost, whether you're an expediter or an RVer, the heat strip on a rooftop air conditioner will not, not, not keep you warm. It'll take the chill out of a brisk 50 degree morning in the campground, but that's about it. The heat strip of a rooftop air conditioner has shattered the hopes and dreams of countless RVers.
Second, resistive heat applications, as with an electric heater, air conditioner, dish washer, etc., do not get along with and play well with battery power. People who live off-the-grid using solar and wind power stored in batteries will still be on the grid for the big electrical appliances, or they'll have some high dollar alternatives, like nine thousand dollar DC refrigerators.
Converting from 115 (110-120) volts AC to 12 volts DC is a 10-times proposition. If a rooftop air conditioner draws 10 amps at 115 volts, it's 100 amps at 12 volts. Then there's the Peukert Effect where, like MPG, the faster you draw amps from a battery the worse your amp mileage gets, and an AC rooftop air conditioner (or electric space heater) translates to seriously high amp draws from a battery bank.
So, lets say you have a really efficient rooftop air conditioner that only draws 10 amps, which is 100 amps from the battery (a little more than that, actually). If you run it for 8 hours, that's 800 amp hours, except the high draw and the Peukert Effect makes it more like 950 amp hours removed from the battery bank. You don't want to ever go down below 50% of depth of discharge, so you'll need a 1900 amp hour battery bank. And that's if you don't use the battery bank and inverter for anything else, and only if you run the AC for 8 hours a day.
Having fun yet?
A 1900 amp hour battery bank will weigh in at around 1000 to 1100 pounds, give or take. So there's that. Also, with high dollar 2/0 cabling, heavy duty fuses and $8 a pop cable lugs, a 1900 amp hour battery bank will cost you between $2500 and $3000. And that's if you use traditional wet cell batteries. If you go with AGM batteries, double that, at least. Yay.
Also, lets say you have a 30 amp battery charger. Any idea how long it'll take to put 800 amp hours into a bank? It's not 800 divided by 30. It's about 2 days.
Seriously.
If you want to run a rooftop AC air conditioner, the only way to do that is either parked in an RV park plugged into shore power, or with a generator. It's cheaper to use a generator, and your vehicle's suspension will thank you.