I bet it will pay for itself in less than 5 years, depending on your electricity rates. I have owned old ones that really had high consumption (both uprights and chest) and the new ones are really much better. I typically find that the lighter the freezer (weight wise) the less energy it consumes - some of these newer chest freezers feel like toys, but really conserve electricity.
These make for a good kegerator "keezer". I made a 3-tap kegerator out of this size and it holds two cornelius kegs or one cornelius keg and one 1/6 bbl sanke keg, along with a 3 gallon seltzer water keg and co2 canister.
I spent another $100 in materials to build the collar, and I can revert it back to a freezer whenever I quit drinking beer (hopefully never). Your local brewery supply should sell kegerator starting kits. It's pretty easy with basic tools.
Sorry, I meant call girls
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I have a larger one given to me, but think it's 18 years old.... Wonder if this would pay for itself in power savings?
I bet it will pay for itself in less than 5 years, depending on your electricity rates. I have owned old ones that really had high consumption (both uprights and chest) and the new ones are really much better. I typically find that the lighter the freezer (weight wise) the less energy it consumes - some of these newer chest freezers feel like toys, but really conserve electricity.
Hard to believe this has an estimated yearly cost of $26! I might get this and mod it with a thermostat and use it as a small room fridge instead of freezer.
I bet it will pay for itself in less than 5 years, depending on your electricity rates. I have owned old ones that really had high consumption (both uprights and chest) and the new ones are really much better. I typically find that the lighter the freezer (weight wise) the less energy it consumes - some of these newer chest freezers feel like toys, but really conserve electricity.
Yeah, this might be better since my current one is much larger and not holding much
143 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
I spent another $100 in materials to build the collar, and I can revert it back to a freezer whenever I quit drinking beer (hopefully never). Your local brewery supply should sell kegerator starting kits. It's pretty easy with basic tools.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Yeah, this might be better since my current one is much larger and not holding much
thanks