Shelly and I moved to Long Island NY in 2015 from Maine. Our boat preceded us in the slip by a week or two, and so when we finally arrived all our new dock mates were curious as heck about these 'newbies' from MAINE. They all had Yeti coolers, and they told us we needed one. They were not impressed by the wet and dry towels that we draped over our cooler to give additional R-Value and shade. It was a running joke that I loved whipping up. I told them about my plan to go to Home Depot to buy some more insulation if I needed it to keep our ice going. That got me through year 1.
Year 2: My admiral had succumbed to their advice, "Honey, we just have to get a Yeti! It will save us so much money on ice!" The clique of dock mates still could not figure us out. I figured I was going to have some fun with this... but my wife's birthday was not until August!?!
So, I not only bought her a Yeti, but I also got a matching decal with the boat name (Her nick name!!! Matching 2-color Font!!!) affixed to the Yeti, and took her picture over the transom showing the boat name, new Yeti with matching boat name, and her pearly whites proud as hell about her 2-month early BD present!
Well, we started being invited to all their outings, and rafting up destinations, and such. My wife is happy with her early BD present. I guess I scored one. It still seems to work "Half Decent".
God help us if we loose that drain plug! Ayah.
LOL!!
To the folks complaining about the heavy weight of the roto molded coolers, which is a very valid complaint, just keep both types of coolers handy. I have a few big Marine Igloo coolers that I use for day or weekend trips. They work fine for a couple days, and are 1/4-1/2 the weight and much easier to move around. But when your going offshore fishing, or cruising for a week or more, then bite the bullet and grab the heavy roto molded cooler by Otterbox, Lifeline, RITC or any of the others that outperformed the yeti!
A few other things to compare on these coolers that are important to me that may help somebody else choose one are:
1. The enclosure clamps/straps/bands: I dislike the yeti style rubber bands that you have to pull down and latch to the bottom part. And to open you have to put your fingers around the rubber and pull down hard to free them. My wife can barely do it herself, she doesn’t have the hand strength. Many of the other brands have copied this with similar designs. Otterbox has the easiest by far to operate with a more mechanical latch, and they smartly reversed it so it latches on the top, not the bottom. So when you un-latch them, the latch falls away and does not grab onto the top. The yeti rubber band type you often have to hold out of the way as you try to swing the top open on the cooler or they will grab the top and hold it closed.
2. Ability to put in separators inside the coolers. Almost none of the Roto molded coolers have slots to slide in separators inside the cooler to keep food separate from drinks for example, or beer separate from soft drinks.... The Otterbox Venture series does, which I love. Another brand that has this feature is the Coleman “Extreme series” coolers. The Coleman Extreme is not a high performance roto molded type cooler, but a great feature for a cheap $100 cooler that none of the other much more expensive units have.
Another plus the Otterbox Venture series has that I don’t know if anyone else does?? The bottom floor of the entire cooler is slanted slightly toward the drain plug. So when/if you want to drain the cooler, there is no need to lift one side, or prop one side up to allow it to drain. Just unscrew the drain plug and it drains 100%.
So to me, there are only 3 things to compare on coolers in this order:
1. Ice retention
2. Latch type
3. Ability to add separators
The 4th would normally be size, weight and shape, but they are all very similar on those.
And those are the same things the “expert” on YouTube goes over in his tests. Those tests are fantastic... the guy does a great job.