"correct angle" is subject to interpretation. Typically, that would be the location's geographic latitude. But when seasons change, so does sun angle, so latitude is a convenient compromise between summer and winter. Is that good? Yes. Is that best? No, not really. In this context of solar energy, it does not take into account that summer delivers more sunshine. My preference is to aim directly at the sun during winter, and when summer comes, the angle is less efficient, but the sun is delivering more energy. At some point, though, it's just splitting hairs.
24 VDC is fine. Here are other factors to consider:
12 VDC components are the most common and readily available so you get the most options to choose from.
A fridge and freezer are not big power hogs, so spec'ing the system to 24 VDC or even 48 VDC won't provide the most common benefit people look for -- lower resistive loss, because of lower DC current in a higher voltage system. The difference is technically still true, but the amount is not significant for the fridge and freezer.
Since this is a temporary arrangement, which components do you want left over after it's torn down?
I'd recommend excluding all but "pure sine wave" inverters, Modified sine wave and other designs are cheaper and simpler to design, but the output waveform only crudely resembles the sine wave supplied by the power grid. In effect, the output is a sine wave PLUS a whole lotta noise making it not a sine wave any more. Many things don't care, but some things do, and when I build something, I don't want to have to keep precautions in the back of my mind for how not to ruin something later.
I was most impressed by a video of Jay Leno motoring around his neighborhood in his 1908 Baker Electric car, powered by the ORIGINAL NiFe batteries (over 100 years old at the time of the video). For lead acid batteries, I've never heard rumors, folklore, or legends of such durability.
I love NiFe and bought 24 KWH ($8,000 batteries + $1,000 shipping) from CiYi battery in China. These are well made and I'm glad I got them, even though they're not yet installed.
NiFe can be reconditioned as capacity fades, so their lifespan is indefinite. I care less about upfront cost and more about
cost per year. Cheap batteries are not cheap if they have to be replaced regularly.
Conditioning/reconditioning is important, so here's documentation on how to do exactly that:
http://www.autocutresearch.com/nife/
Still, car batteries are everywhere. A YouTube channel, "Sweet Project Cars", has a video on how to rejuvenate car batteries. I haven't done it, yet, but plan to. I've collected 4 car batteries for free, since they were considered dead. I'll try out the rejuvenation technique from the video and if any succeed, I'll keep doing that until I have 4 restored (free) batteries, then proceed with the project they're for.
A great resource for learning about practical solar is Will Prowse, a YouTuber. His earlier videos are very hands on, but they're all useful and done well.
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