Service life of a high-efficiency refrigerator?
On Sep 14, 7:33�pm, Tony Hwang wrote:
wrote:
On Sep 14, 6:41 pm, mike wrote:
My refrigerator is 36 years old. Still going strong, but
if you believe published efficiency numbers, it's costing
me a hundred bux a year more than it would for a new one.
Payback calculations depend on your assumptions for the
time value of money and inflation in energy cost. Just looking
at the cash flow, the break even point is 7 years or so.
Looks marginal, but let's save the planet. Off
I went to look at refrigerators.
While chatting with the guy at Sears, he "disclosed" that
the smaller compressors run much longer at higher pressure
and they only
last 6 to 7 years. If true, that negates all the savings.
Is there any relevant data relating to service life of the
newer, high-efficiency home refrigerators?
mike
my high efficency fridge is 11 years old and going strong.
Hi,
Our is ~14 years old and never had any problem so far. Knock on the wood!- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
the first generation had all sorts of troubles with overheating blown
compressors.
today reability appears good.
|