Hi Pappy,
No, we haven't used the AC generator very much, though there have been a few times I was glad to have it. For example, when we stopped for lunch in Folsom, CA, last July it was 100 degrees out and the only convenient parking was in full sun. I was glad to start up the generator to run the air conditioning. Maybe half the running hours we have on the generator are from firing it up once a month under load for an hour, as recommended by Cummins.
Running the truck engine also charges the coach batteries, of course, but not as quickly as AC from shore power or the AC generator.
Our coach batteries are the two beefy 6-volt ones Phoenix installs as standard equipment.
The NovaKool electric-only fridge needs no outside venting, so I asked Phoenix not to cut their usual holes in the side wall for a propane-fired fridge. Fewer holes is better. All service access is inside the rig, through the removable panel below the fridge door. The fridge did give me fits for a while with an infrequent intermittent failure which took me months to track down. Every time I'd remove the access panel to troubleshoot, it would start working. (My wife said all I had to do was wave my screwdriver near it to scare it.) I finally traced the problem to its small optional ventilation fan, which would occasionally fail to start, draw excessive current, and cause the controller to shut down. Since I've replaced the fan, it's been very reliable.
Like other small fridges, this one has only a single thermostat, located in its main compartment. I does OK in warm weather, but when it's cold inside the rig, the compressor doesn't need to run much to keep the main compartment cold. This has the unfortunate side effect of allowing the temperature in the separate freezer to increase. I guess this is nature's way of suggesting that maybe I don't need to drive around the country with ice cream in arm's reach, which just makes me get fat anyway.
John