Espar of mi no longer sells them.
Perhaps that explains why I received no reply whatsoever to the last email I sent to Espar of Michigan this past December 11th, regarding what I noted as problems with the units performance and/or design.
Something that I can assure you was highly disappointing after spending roughly $5K on the unit ...
and then an additional $1K within the last year or so on good quality batteries to power the unit ...
He says they were not very good for our application. I believe they were only 4500 BTU.
4700 BTU actually IIRC ...
I think rl has a bulkhead which would increase the units efficiency.
As Turtle mentioned, I have a curtain (quilted moving blanket) hanging just behind my bunk - which reduces the area to be cooled ...
but doesn't make the unit any more "efficient" ...
Its still on espar of mi site but they no longer sell it. Its only 4700 BTU just not really big enough.
If memory serves, people are using 5K BTU A/C units to cool cargo vans ... so the (lack of) cooling capacity is a bit of a red herring - at least based on my observations of the unit's performance ... although I will allow that the unit certainly doesn't have an excess of capacity.
The problem (IMO) is not the capacity - it is (or may be) certain aspects in the design of the unit - which are apparently programmed or hard-coded into the silicon (chip) of the unit's controller.
I can't really say for sure - since, as I alluded to above, my last email to Espar of Michigan received no response whatsoever ... not even an acknowledgement that it was received.
There were a couple of problems that I noted in that email which were the result of observations I made last summer while in Laredo ... specifically at midnight (with no additional heat load from the sun) when the outside ambient temperature was around 90F degrees. Since the unit was not cooling enough to allow me to sleep, I decided to investigate what was going on.
The first problem I discovered was the placement of the ambient/return air temperature sensor - from my email to Espar of Michigan:
"Location of the temperature probe/sensor:
The stock location inside the housing of the unit is no good - the area it is mounted in apparently either gets cooled, or the coolness of what it is mounted to makes the probe read incorrectly, thinking that it is much cooler in the cab than it actually is. I unmounted the probe and moved it outside of the inner cover (which contains the LED panel and controls) with the outer shroud off and noticed an immediate difference in the temperature output (much cooler) It would be helpful if this probe came with a longer lead wire - so that it could be located further away from the unit."
The second problem relates to how the unit's compressors (there are two) cycle on and off - from the email:
"Compressor "cycling":
This one is the real biggie - with the vehicle off and running solely on the batteries, the refrigerant compressors cycled on and off ... with the vehicle running (and supplying more voltage) this does not occur.
This is huge ... because it results in a 10+ degree swing in the air temperature coming from the outlets of the unit. The outlet air temperature would drop to around 72 degrees F (which was quite comfortable) while the compressors were engaged. Within 30 seconds or so of running at that temp, the compressors would cycle off and the outlet temperature would gradually start to climb ... until it hit around 84 or 86 degrees F .... it would stay there around 30 seconds or so ... and then the whole cycle would repeat ... endlessly ..."
It is my opinion, that the manufacturer (Dirna) of the unit, in seeking to optimize the unit for minimal power consumption, threw the baby out with the bath water - by not providing a way for the end-user to turn off the power-saving feature of compressor cycling, to achieve maximal cooling at the expense of power consumption.
The unit - with no compressor cycling - would have kept me cool that night in Laredo ...
As mentioned by Turtle, my aux battery bank consists of four Trojan L 16E-AC 6-volt batteries ... so "lack of power" wasn't a problem.
A fix for the problem would be relatively easy and cheap for the manufacturer to implement ...
if they chose to do so ... a redesigned controller PCB is all it would take.
As many of you have no doubt observed, I can be rather blunt and have a rather acerbic tongue at times. I felt that my email to Espar of Michigan was largely polite overall, in light of the circumstances, and was mostly asking for some help/advice/input in terms of troubleshooting the problems I was experiencing.
I have, up until this point, been on good terms, so far as I know, with the owner and staff of Espar of Michigan.
Probably the most "acerbic" thing I said in the entire email was the following, which followed the text I quoted above:
"It was simply intolerable, in terms of actually trying to sleep.
Like I said previously - this cycling does not occur if the vehicle is running ... it will blow good and cold all day long.
Any thoughts ?"
Needless to say, the complete lack of any response whatsoever was ...
disappointing ...
to say the very least ...