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komodore comrade June 19th 05 11:09 PM

defroster heater, calculating resistence of replacement
 
hi there,

my fridge is icing up and when i looked inside i found its 23" defrost
glass tube heater shattered. it had a sticker stating 400w

i found a 12" replacement of around 30ohms for a few bucks which i
fitted. it iced up again and checking the heater i found it fused. part
of the element coil broke from excessive current.

what could be the problem? defrost thermostat? timer? resistence in
replacement heater too high? how can i calculate it properly? does
length of replacement heater make any difference to why it blew?

thanks


NSM June 19th 05 11:34 PM


"komodore comrade" wrote in message
oups.com...

hi there,

my fridge is icing up and when i looked inside i found its 23" defrost
glass tube heater shattered. it had a sticker stating 400w

i found a 12" replacement of around 30ohms for a few bucks which i
fitted. it iced up again and checking the heater i found it fused. part
of the element coil broke from excessive current.

what could be the problem? defrost thermostat? timer? resistence in
replacement heater too high? how can i calculate it properly? does
length of replacement heater make any difference to why it blew?


You need to use the right voltage heater to prevent that and the right
wattage to prevent melting the fridge.

N



James Sweet June 20th 05 12:29 AM


"komodore comrade" wrote in message
oups.com...
hi there,

my fridge is icing up and when i looked inside i found its 23" defrost
glass tube heater shattered. it had a sticker stating 400w

i found a 12" replacement of around 30ohms for a few bucks which i
fitted. it iced up again and checking the heater i found it fused. part
of the element coil broke from excessive current.

what could be the problem? defrost thermostat? timer? resistence in
replacement heater too high? how can i calculate it properly? does
length of replacement heater make any difference to why it blew?

thanks


30 ohms is 480W assuming 120v. The resistance probably goes up a bit when it
gets hot, so it's reasonable to assume that the new one is also 400W. I've
never seen one of these shatter, though it stands to reason that the
thermostat is probably defective and likely killed both the old one and the
new one since they obviously got too hot.




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