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Mike S. June 10th 06 05:43 AM

Refrigerator dispute
 
My parents have a refrigerator that is nearly 20 years old. There was a
problem with the door so my father tried to fix it. He ended up taking
the plastic part off the door where the food goes but left the gasket
loosely hanging on the door. We closed the door as tight as possible
but it most likely wasn't sealing correctly and allowing the cold to
escape.

I noticed three months later that the refrigerator was running nearly
constantly. The temp. would fluctuate between 40-60 degrees and the
inside was sweating but there were also ice formations in the back. My
father claims it's because the door isn't on tight. He got another door
without the gasket and put that up there to test, and it formed nearly
an airtight seal (better than before). However, the refrigerator is
still running constantly.

What we can't figure out is if it's running constantly because the
proper door isn't on there or because it's old and on it's last legs.
Any thoughts? The answer is what decides if we should get a new
refrigerator or not. I figure that with new refrigerators being more
energy efficient, we'll end up saving more money in the long run. My
father doesn't think about/understand things like that so he disagrees.
I'd love to hear opinions on this.


Phisherman June 10th 06 11:44 AM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On 9 Jun 2006 21:43:52 -0700, "Mike S."
wrote:

My parents have a refrigerator that is nearly 20 years old. There was a
problem with the door so my father tried to fix it. He ended up taking
the plastic part off the door where the food goes but left the gasket
loosely hanging on the door. We closed the door as tight as possible
but it most likely wasn't sealing correctly and allowing the cold to
escape.

I noticed three months later that the refrigerator was running nearly
constantly. The temp. would fluctuate between 40-60 degrees and the
inside was sweating but there were also ice formations in the back. My
father claims it's because the door isn't on tight. He got another door
without the gasket and put that up there to test, and it formed nearly
an airtight seal (better than before). However, the refrigerator is
still running constantly.

What we can't figure out is if it's running constantly because the
proper door isn't on there or because it's old and on it's last legs.
Any thoughts? The answer is what decides if we should get a new
refrigerator or not. I figure that with new refrigerators being more
energy efficient, we'll end up saving more money in the long run. My
father doesn't think about/understand things like that so he disagrees.
I'd love to hear opinions on this.


A refrigerator running constantly without cooling is just an enormous
waste of energy. You will see your electric bill increase, plus the
refrigerator will put out more heat. If you leave the frig as is, it
will burn out, perhaps catch fire, and you'll have to replace it.

To test a refrig seal close the door on a dollar bill. It should grab
the bill when you try to pull it out. Test the seal all the way
around.

Joseph Meehan June 10th 06 11:46 AM

Refrigerator dispute
 
Mike S. wrote:
My parents have a refrigerator that is nearly 20 years old. There was
a problem with the door so my father tried to fix it. He ended up
taking the plastic part off the door where the food goes but left the
gasket loosely hanging on the door. We closed the door as tight as
possible but it most likely wasn't sealing correctly and allowing the
cold to escape.

I noticed three months later that the refrigerator was running nearly
constantly. The temp. would fluctuate between 40-60 degrees and the
inside was sweating but there were also ice formations in the back. My
father claims it's because the door isn't on tight. He got another
door without the gasket and put that up there to test, and it formed
nearly an airtight seal (better than before). However, the
refrigerator is still running constantly.

What we can't figure out is if it's running constantly because the
proper door isn't on there or because it's old and on it's last legs.
Any thoughts? The answer is what decides if we should get a new
refrigerator or not. I figure that with new refrigerators being more
energy efficient, we'll end up saving more money in the long run. My
father doesn't think about/understand things like that so he
disagrees. I'd love to hear opinions on this.


The poorly fitting door seal likely allowed enough moisture to get in to
form so much ice that it is now blocking air flow. All that ice needs to be
melted before it will start functioning properly. The last time that
happened to me it took several days to thaw out properly. If the new
current seal is not properly sealing it may just freeze up again.

Frankly your father has spent more time and money on the frig than I
would have. A twenty year old fridge would not get much effort on my part.
I would be looking for a new more efficient one.

--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit



m Ransley June 10th 06 12:56 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
To let a frige run constantly from bad door seals is dumb , an old frige
pulling 500 watts would cost me 50$ a month, a new highly efficient
frige can cost only 4-7$ a month. New refrigerators, ones made after
2003 are 60 -65% more efficient than 20-25yr old units. Use an amp
meter to confirm it to yourself. Do you also leave your doors and
windows open with heat or AC on. That old junker is waisting maybe 500$
a year.


[email protected] June 10th 06 12:58 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 

Phisherman wrote:
On 9 Jun 2006 21:43:52 -0700, "Mike S."
wrote:

My parents have a refrigerator that is nearly 20 years old. There was a
problem with the door so my father tried to fix it. He ended up taking
the plastic part off the door where the food goes but left the gasket
loosely hanging on the door. We closed the door as tight as possible
but it most likely wasn't sealing correctly and allowing the cold to
escape.

I noticed three months later that the refrigerator was running nearly
constantly. The temp. would fluctuate between 40-60 degrees and the
inside was sweating but there were also ice formations in the back. My
father claims it's because the door isn't on tight. He got another door
without the gasket and put that up there to test, and it formed nearly
an airtight seal (better than before). However, the refrigerator is
still running constantly.

What we can't figure out is if it's running constantly because the
proper door isn't on there or because it's old and on it's last legs.
Any thoughts? The answer is what decides if we should get a new
refrigerator or not. I figure that with new refrigerators being more
energy efficient, we'll end up saving more money in the long run. My
father doesn't think about/understand things like that so he disagrees.
I'd love to hear opinions on this.


A refrigerator running constantly without cooling is just an enormous
waste of energy. You will see your electric bill increase, plus the
refrigerator will put out more heat. If you leave the frig as is, it
will burn out, perhaps catch fire, and you'll have to replace it.

To test a refrig seal close the door on a dollar bill. It should grab
the bill when you try to pull it out. Test the seal all the way
around.


your better off buying a new fridge, nice shiney new purchase that will
save you big bucks on electric. of that doesnt happen at least get a
appliance repairman to service it and fix it right.

DIY is great but if youre not successful pay the price and get it fixed
right!


mm June 11th 06 05:57 AM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On Sat, 10 Jun 2006 06:56:06 -0500, (m Ransley)
wrote:

To let a frige run constantly from bad door seals is dumb , an old frige
pulling 500 watts would cost me 50$ a month, a new highly efficient
frige can cost only 4-7$ a month. New refrigerators, ones made after
2003 are 60 -65% more efficient than 20-25yr old units.


Now I'm confused. By 60 to 65% more efficient, do you mean that the
new ones use 40 to 35% of the electricity of the 20-25 year old ones?

If so, how would your bill go down from 50$ to 7-4$ dollars? Isn't
that 86 to 92 percent more efficient?

Use an amp
meter to confirm it to yourself. Do you also leave your doors and
windows open with heat or AC on. That old junker is waisting maybe 500$
a year.


Here too. If the old one costs 600 dollars a year to run, if the new
one saves 500 dollars a year, wouldn't it have to be 83.33333% more
efficient?


mm June 11th 06 06:01 AM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On 9 Jun 2006 21:43:52 -0700, "Mike S."
wrote:

My parents have a refrigerator that is nearly 20 years old. There was a
problem with the door so my father tried to fix it. He ended up taking
the plastic part off the door where the food goes but left the gasket
loosely hanging on the door.


Why couldn't you just screw the gasket on right?

If the holes are too big, use bigger screws. If the holes are too
small, use smaller screws and washers. I don't get it.

None of the tests below are any good as long as the door gasket is
loose.

We closed the door as tight as possible
but it most likely wasn't sealing correctly and allowing the cold to
escape.

I noticed three months later that the refrigerator was running nearly


What was it like 2 days or a month after the repair? If it was
better, what changed? The gasket?

constantly. The temp. would fluctuate between 40-60 degrees and the
inside was sweating but there were also ice formations in the back. My
father claims it's because the door isn't on tight. He got another door
without the gasket and put that up there to test, and it formed nearly


Nearly only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.

Why not take the gasket from the first door and put it on the second
door? OTOH, how could the second door fit even nearly tight without a
gasket? Most gaskets are a half inch thick. Was it the wrong door?

an airtight seal (better than before). However, the refrigerator is
still running constantly.

What we can't figure out is if it's running constantly because the
proper door isn't on there or because it's old and on it's last legs.


It needs a gasket and a tight fit.

Any thoughts? The answer is what decides if we should get a new
refrigerator or not. I figure that with new refrigerators being more
energy efficient, we'll end up saving more money in the long run. My
father doesn't think about/understand things like that so he disagrees.
I'd love to hear opinions on this.



m Ransley June 11th 06 01:42 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
If his door is open as he said, it does not seal 100%, and as he said
its running continuosly, being an old unit pulling 400-500 watts it
could easily cost him 50$ a month since it is not operating correctly. A
new 19.5 cu ft Sears, the most efficient made 3 years ago costs me apx
3.5-4$ a month verified by me with a Kill-A-Watt. Average efficiency
increases on new units over 15+ yr old units is 66%, often you save much
more from old units not running at their peak, as in leaking doors or
not being cleaned


m Ransley June 11th 06 01:44 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
I never saw a gasket screwed on, unless tou remove the interior panel to
do so.


mm June 11th 06 03:24 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On Sun, 11 Jun 2006 07:42:32 -0500, (m Ransley)
wrote:

If his door is open as he said, it does not seal 100%, and as he said


Ok, I get it. We were still talking about one with a bad seal.

its running continuosly, being an old unit pulling 400-500 watts it
could easily cost him 50$ a month since it is not operating correctly. A
new 19.5 cu ft Sears, the most efficient made 3 years ago costs me apx
3.5-4$ a month verified by me with a Kill-A-Watt. Average efficiency
increases on new units over 15+ yr old units is 66%, often you save much
more from old units not running at their peak, as in leaking doors or
not being cleaned


If they didn't clean the old one, they probably won't clean the new
one. Of course it will take a long time to get as dirty as the old
one, if they never cleaned the old one. People should get in the
habit of cleaning the old ones and the new ones.

mm June 11th 06 03:26 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On Sun, 11 Jun 2006 07:44:28 -0500, (m Ransley)
wrote:

I never saw a gasket screwed on, unless tou remove the interior panel to
do so.


I haven't replaced mine yet, but when one does, there must be a way to
attach it, instead of leaving it loosely hanging on the door, as the
OP described his.

mm June 11th 06 03:27 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
On Sun, 11 Jun 2006 07:44:28 -0500, (m Ransley)
wrote:

I never saw a gasket screwed on, unless tou remove the interior panel to
do so.


I haven't replaced mine yet, but when one does, there must be a way to
attach it, instead of leaving it loosely hanging on the door, as the
OP described his.

(So whatever is done to attach a new gasket can be done to reattach
the old one, or if not, some other method can be used.)

Rudy June 11th 06 07:43 PM

Refrigerator dispute
 
Frankly your father has spent more time and money on the frig than I
would have. A twenty year old fridge would not get much effort on my
part. I would be looking for a new more efficient one.


Some electric utility operators have "Reward" posters out for a fridge
like that. They actuall will PAY you to get rid of it. Check..




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