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Don Young Don Young is offline
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Default GE Profile Fridge not cooling


"Steve Kraus" wrote in message
. 3.70...
I'm pretty sure the problem stems from poor air circulation and I am
starting to be convinced it's caused by internal ice buildup although
that's not totally certain.

Here is what I have accomplished so far.

I saw a photo of the defrost timer online and recognized a corner of it as
something I'd seen and thus located it inside the refrigerator compartment
behind the plastic cover at the top.

Using a small screwdriver I gently advanced it until the continuously
running refrigerator shut off and went into the defrost mode. Measuring
the input current at over 6A I determined the heater was working (actually
I didn't have to measure as I could see a good spark when I pulled the
cord).

I had planned to move it out of defrost mode 20 minutes or so later but by
then it had moved off of its own accord and the machine was running again
but performance was no better.

So the timer was working or at least it was now. Could have been stuck
earlier I guess.

We also do not know if the heater stayed on or if it's intermittent.

This morning I put the timer into a defrost cycle again and I could hear
sounds like bits of ice falling in the evap compartment. Again the timer
moved on and the fridge restarted.

Afterwards if anything the air flow (as noted at the back of the freezer
compartment) was worse. The melting ice must have dropped to a place
where
it's clogging air flow more than before. And if out of touch of the
evaporator and defrost heater it's not going to melt and the defrost
terminating thermostat will turn off the heat once there is no more ice on
the evap itself.

So we have the following suspects:

Previously stuck defrost timer allowed this much ice to build up
Intermittent defrost heater
Defrost thermostat shutting off heat too soon

Unfortunately there's too much in the freezer right now to shut everything
down and give it a thorough meltdown. Or even to access the evap
compartment.

Seems like you are on the right track. I think you have ice buildup and will
have to remove the covers or let the unit stay off with the doors open long
enough for it to melt. I have not noticed you mentioning whether you can
determine if the circulating fan that is supposed to blow the cold air into
the refrigerator compartment is running or not. I assume you are aware that
on one common system there is a damper door in that air passage that is
designated as the "FREEZER" temperature control. The thermostat generally is
in the refrigerator compartment and the freezer temperature is controlled by
how much of its air you transfer into the refrigerator to satisfy the
thermostat. By restricting the air the unit has to run more to keep the
refrigerator at the thermostat temperature, so the freezer runs colder.

Don Young