Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
I have determined that the compressor is the cause of my noisy
refrigerator. It clunks as it turns on & off. What effect does this have upon the operation of the refrigerator other than being noisy? Can this cause higher than normal electricity consumption? Thanks. |
#2
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
Check the rubber motor mounts. |
#3
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
On Oct 27, 2:37 pm, "professorpaul" wrote: Check the rubber motor mounts. Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit. |
#4
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
Nuallain wrote: On Oct 27, 2:37 pm, "professorpaul" wrote: Check the rubber motor mounts. Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit. loose IN the compressor or ON it? how easily can you shake the compressor? the ones i've seen are real solid. maybe the rubber moutns are fine, the the barckets and such the mounts are attached to may have lost a bolt. |
#5
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
On Oct 27, 5:24 pm, "Tater" wrote: Nuallain wrote: On Oct 27, 2:37 pm, "professorpaul" wrote: Check the rubber motor mounts. Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit.loose IN the compressor or ON it? how easily can you shake the compressor? the ones i've seen are real solid. maybe the rubber moutns are fine, the the barckets and such the mounts are attached to may have lost a bolt. It sounds like there is something rattling around INSIDE the compressor. As far as bracket on the outside of the compressor; would those typically be near the top? The only thing I can find are the 4 rubber motor mounts and their associated screws at the bottom. |
#6
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
On 27 Oct 2006 20:06:10 -0700, "Nuallain"
wrote: On Oct 27, 5:24 pm, "Tater" wrote: Nuallain wrote: On Oct 27, 2:37 pm, "professorpaul" wrote: Check the rubber motor mounts. Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit.loose IN the compressor or ON it? how easily can you shake the compressor? the ones i've seen are real solid. maybe the rubber moutns are fine, the the barckets and such the mounts are attached to may have lost a bolt. It sounds like there is something rattling around INSIDE the Take a one to three foot stick, I suppose hardwood is best but I'm sure you can use lots of other things, and hold it near your ear or on that flap and put the other end a variety of places until you track down the noise with more certainty. I doubt this is wasting much electricity, if any, no matter what the problem. IF you can fix it before the compressor gets loose and catches and kills the cat, you should, but otherwise, you can use it until it breaks. I'm pretty sure it will break a little earlier if this noise is still there. I am not a repairman. compressor. As far as bracket on the outside of the compressor; would those typically be near the top? The only thing I can find are the 4 rubber motor mounts and their associated screws at the bottom. |
#7
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
On 27 Oct 2006 12:18:34 -0700, "Nuallain"
wrote: Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit. The compressor inside the canister has four rubber grommets that are snucked onto four springs welded to the floor of the canister. The compressor is thus suspended in the middle of the canister for noise and vibration isolatation. One of the grommets must have popped off a spring. This can happen if you laid the fridge flat when you moved house. The canister is sealed. This grommet problem cannot be repaired. With time the power cord inside the canister will fracture. Then its a new fridge for you. With one grommet out of anchor the compressor motor will twist due to the start-up torque and hit the side of the canister. Clunk. Same thing when the compressor motor stops. The torque will cause the motor to hit the canister wall again. Clunk. |
#8
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
In A/C compressors, there can be a mechanical thermal cutout, sometimes w/ a
spring, that can come loose. There is a spring-loaded cap over this, that can be removed w/ some difficulty. If you have a similar deal, you might just have to scrap this item, and jump it out electrically. No big loss. Inyone notice how quiet the very old round-fridges (Kelvinators et al) were? Like watches. Much quieter than this tin stuff today. The compressors themselves were whisper-quiet--quieter, even! -- Mr. P.V.'d (formerly Droll Troll), Yonkers, NY Stop Corruption in Congress & Send the Ultimate Message: Absolutely Vote, for *Anyone BUT* a Democrat or a Republican Ending Corruption in Congress is the Single Best Way to Materially Improve Your Life entropic3.14decay at optonline2.718 dot net; remove pi and e to reply--ie, all d'numbuhs "PaPaPeng" wrote in message ... On 27 Oct 2006 12:18:34 -0700, "Nuallain" wrote: Thanks I did that. When I shake the compressor there is something loose in there that seems to be the culprit. The compressor inside the canister has four rubber grommets that are snucked onto four springs welded to the floor of the canister. The compressor is thus suspended in the middle of the canister for noise and vibration isolatation. One of the grommets must have popped off a spring. This can happen if you laid the fridge flat when you moved house. The canister is sealed. This grommet problem cannot be repaired. With time the power cord inside the canister will fracture. Then its a new fridge for you. With one grommet out of anchor the compressor motor will twist due to the start-up torque and hit the side of the canister. Clunk. Same thing when the compressor motor stops. The torque will cause the motor to hit the canister wall again. Clunk. |
#9
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Noisy refrigerator
Not much. Eventually, the fridge will stop cooling.
I don't know about the energy consumption. but nearly anything you do increases the energy. Start budgeting for the replacement fridge. -- Christopher A. Young You can't shout down a troll. You have to starve them. .. "Nuallain" wrote in message oups.com... I have determined that the compressor is the cause of my noisy refrigerator. It clunks as it turns on & off. What effect does this have upon the operation of the refrigerator other than being noisy? Can this cause higher than normal electricity consumption? Thanks. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
"Flood" Problem in Refrigerator | Home Repair | |||
"Flood" Problem in Refrigerator | Home Ownership | |||
GE refrigerator warranty repair misery | Home Ownership | |||
refrigerator Very noisy | Home Repair | |||
GE HTS22GBMARWW Digital Controls refrig 22 cu ft.....main bord failure number #3! | Home Repair |