The yacht is anchored while the crew longs for cans from the fridge. Skipper looks anxiously at the voltmeter on the supply battery: Will there be enough power for the planned overnight trip after the newly fitted ice box has successfully cooled everything down?
For those who are either looking for additional cooling or are travelling puristically, there are a few tips that work completely without electricity. These tricks are particularly useful on smaller yachts where there is no room for powerful battery banks. This prevents the butter from floating away.
In a small series of experiments, the various tricks were tested with a liquid at exactly 30 degrees Celsius; half a litre was to be cooled at a time. 450 grams of ice cubes lowered the temperature in the bottle to 1.4 degrees within two hours, and after 24 hours it had returned to air temperature. 350 grams of ice with 100 grams of salt cooled faster: to 0.6 degrees in one hour - but it also warmed up again more quickly. Ordinary cool packs cooled down to 15 degrees, after 15 hours they were on a par with the first two methods: practicable. As predicted, the 440-gram Easy2Cool cooling pads reached the lowest temperature of 8.3 degrees after seven hours and maintained it for a long time, returning to 19.3 degrees after 24 hours.
Whether towel, sock or clay pot: all evaporators had the greatest cooling efforts; after 24 hours, one to two degrees below air temperature were registered.