I really hate electronic controls on some things

These RV fridges are on example, and I have 2 of those Dometic N64 series-
A few years back we were camped in the mountains when lightning hit
near the camper. Aftermath, fridge didn't work. Blew out the board in it..the board has a very sensitive circuit that detects the flame by sensing an extremely low millivolt level from a thermocouple stuck into the flame. No sensing it, no operation. Roughly $150 for a new board and an ice chest needed for the rest of
that vacation. When I got the new board, being an electronics guy I figured I'd repair the old board using the new as a guide to troubleshoot. Nope- Dometic changed the board design all around, hopefully to improve EMF surge supression. BTW all this occured with NO connection to AC as there was none in that particular campground, strictly an induced surge from the
nearby hit.
Scroll forward, maybe not learning all I could about electronic Dometic fridges I bought one for an RV I planned to build. Well changed my mind and built a cabin on my remote land instead. Put the fridge in it, no AC power on that land.
Well- since the fridge requires power ALL the time, one can't leave it for a week running without a sizeable battery system. Uses very little propane but will suck a typical 100 A Hr RV type battery dead in 3-4 days.
So one can't return the next weekend to marinating steaks and cold beer....
I really sometimes long for old school with a knob and the old bulb type thermostat that operated entirely from pressure induced in a sealed tube working a diaphragm connected to a switch and no electronics/power involved.:drool:
I also had a Dometic roof ac that was electronically controlled. If the lights blinked while you were out you returned to a 100 deg camper because the stupid thing wouldn't restart without a human pressing a button.
Yep electronics have NO place in some stuff.