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-   -   Upright freezer door won't stay closed (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/156842-upright-freezer-door-wont-stay-closed.html)

tenplay May 10th 06 12:33 AM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 
I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately
the door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than
duct tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike

ameijers May 10th 06 12:49 AM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 

"tenplay" wrote in message
. ..
I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately
the door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than
duct tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike


A level and a wrench. Maybe some shims. Unless the door is loose, reality
has changed, and the freezer is leaning forward. Adjust the legs till it
stays shut. Did you have a lot of rain and/or a dry spell lately? Your slab
may be moving. I assume you already checked the obvious, and the thing isn't
overloaded or frosted up so bad that the door doesn't shut tightly? And the
hinge screws haven't come loose from kids swinging on it or something? (When
they get bored, they'll make a jungle gym out of anything...)

aem sends...


PipeDown May 10th 06 01:04 AM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 

"tenplay" wrote in message
. ..
I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately the
door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than duct
tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike


Figure out why it is not closing and fix that.

If it is not overloaded or a drawer or shelf sticking out them maybe the
door seal is damaged. Sometimes the door seal peals up at one corner of the
door (often bottom near the hinge) and folds over forming an obstruction
thet prevents the door from closing but is soft enough to be forced shut
anyway. If it is badly damaged, you can get a replacement at an appliance
parts shop (see yellow pages)




mm May 10th 06 07:25 AM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 
On Tue, 09 May 2006 16:33:44 -0700, tenplay wrote:

I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately
the door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than
duct tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike


I adjust my fridge legs so the doors to the fridge and freezer close
themselves. This was easy at my last place where I only opened the
door 90 degrees, but harder here to get it to work when the doors are
opened more than 90 degrees. But it still only took 10 or 15 minutes
and it's worked for 20 years.

Alan May 10th 06 08:19 AM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 

PipeDown wrote:
"tenplay" wrote in message
. ..
I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately the
door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than duct
tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike


Figure out why it is not closing and fix that.

If it is not overloaded or a drawer or shelf sticking out them maybe the
door seal is damaged. Sometimes the door seal peals up at one corner of the
door (often bottom near the hinge) and folds over forming an obstruction
thet prevents the door from closing but is soft enough to be forced shut
anyway. If it is badly damaged, you can get a replacement at an appliance
parts shop (see yellow pages)


I've had problems with the door not closing because the seal got warped
or whatever. Are seals fairly standard?


RayV May 10th 06 02:01 PM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 
tenplay said:
There's got to be a better solution than duct tape.

Ray shouted back:
BLASPHEMER !
Go to the lodge and pray for forgiveness lest your tape be cursed to
never stick again.
http://redgreen.com


Joey May 10th 06 11:55 PM

Upright freezer door won't stay closed
 
tenplay wrote:

I have an old Kelvinator upright freezer sitting in the garage. Lately
the door won't stay closed. There's got to be a better solution than
duct tape. Thanks for any advice/suggestions. Mike


Everyone here is on the right track but didn't tell you why the seal has
probably failed or how it works. These seals are magnetic and they
stick to the door frame which must be very smooth and clean. If you can
put a piece of paper anywhere in the seal with the door closed and
easily pull it out then the door (rubber magnetic) seal needs replacing.
They are a fairly common replacement component.

J


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