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Refrigerator not working again
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not
working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote:
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Call a ****ing professional service tech you nut-job. |
Refrigerator not working again
Mike Hocksbigg wrote:
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Call a ****ing professional service tech you nut-job. Wound pretty tight today aren't we? |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 13:44:04 -0700, Jim Stewart wrote:
Mike Hocksbigg wrote: On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Call a ****ing professional service tech you nut-job. Wound pretty tight today aren't we? Yep. |
Refrigerator not working again
On Sep 21, 4:18*pm, Ignoramus25344 ignoramus25...@NOSPAM.
25344.invalid wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Just guessing, again, but this sounds like the pressure is not bleeding off, for whatever reason. It's hard to imagine seals that would hold pressure for hours, but I suppose it's possible. Or, maybe there's some contamination somewhere - water, perhaps, that's freezing in a low spot in a line? Wait a minute - I just reread your post - Am I right that it does restart if you let it sit a couple of hours? What if you let it sit a few (maybe 5) minutes? Wait till the compressor is running, then unplug it after a couple of minutes. Then wait five minutes and plug it back in. Does it restart then? If so, there's something wrong with the control circuitry. It should not, under normal circumstances, be trying to start against a load. There should be enough hysterisis in the thermostat, or some sort of lock-out timer to prevent rapid cycling. Do you maybe have an air leak - lik in the door gasket? I could see how that would cause rapid cycling. RS |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote:
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. You're already wasted more time and money that a housecall and diagnosis would have cost. You can't quit now. Replace the compressor. Then the evaporator. Then rip out all the plumbing and replace that too. Replace the control unit too while you're at it. Don't forget to replace the outlet, inside house wiring, and the utility power pole. |
Refrigerator not working again
AZ Nomad wrote:
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. You're already wasted more time and money that a housecall and diagnosis would have cost. You can't quit now. Replace the compressor. Then the evaporator. Then rip out all the plumbing and replace that too. Replace the control unit too while you're at it. Don't forget to replace the outlet, inside house wiring, and the utility power pole. Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. Jeff -- Jeffry Wisnia (W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE) The speed of light is 1.8*10e12 furlongs per fortnight. |
Refrigerator not working again
jeff_wisnia wrote:
AZ Nomad wrote: On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:18:40 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. You're already wasted more time and money that a housecall and diagnosis would have cost. You can't quit now. Replace the compressor. Then the evaporator. Then rip out all the plumbing and replace that too. Replace the control unit too while you're at it. Don't forget to replace the outlet, inside house wiring, and the utility power pole. Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. Jeff I thought it was funny. I give it 5 stars. |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. Look dude.... Just ****can the thing and buy another one. And PLEASE just shut the **** up. Have a nice day! :-) -- None of you seem to understand. I'm not locked in here with you....You're locked in here with ME! |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-21, HVAC wrote:
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. Look dude.... Just ****can the thing and buy another one. And PLEASE just shut the **** up. Have a nice day! :-) Just curious why are you so ****y, a slow day? Customers not calling? i |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. And a month ago I said... Get a refrigerator thermometer (kitchen stuff department of stores), then keep an eye on the temperature. If there was a lot of water which came out from having it off while you fixed it, and this happens again in a month or so, suspect the defrost/heater/timer. |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... Look dude.... Just ****can the thing and buy another one. And PLEASE just shut the **** up. Have a nice day! :-) Just curious why are you so ****y, ****y? This is me being NICE. a slow day? Customers not calling? I've never been so busy. Seriously. I do commercial only and all I can say is WHAT recession? -- Every Time You See a Rainbow, God is Having Gay Sex |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-21, Bill wrote:
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. And a month ago I said... Get a refrigerator thermometer (kitchen stuff department of stores), then keep an eye on the temperature. If there was a lot of water which came out from having it off while you fixed it, and this happens again in a th or so, suspect the defrost/heater/timer. \ Thanks As a matter of fact, there was not much water (none that I could see) that came out. i |
Refrigerator not working again
On Sep 21, 5:50*pm, "A. Baum" wrote:
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 14:20:36 -0700, rangerssuck wrote: On Sep 21, 4:18*pm, Ignoramus25344 ignoramus25...@NOSPAM. 25344.invalid wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Just guessing, again, but this sounds like the pressure is not bleeding off, for whatever reason. It's hard to imagine seals that would hold pressure for hours, but I suppose it's possible. Or, maybe there's some contamination somewhere - water, perhaps, that's freezing in a low spot in a line? Wait a minute - I just reread your post - Am I right that it does restart if you let it sit a couple of hours? What if you let it sit a few (maybe 5) minutes? Wait till the compressor is running, then unplug it after a couple of minutes. Then wait five minutes and plug it back in. Does it restart then? If so, there's something wrong with the control circuitry. It should not, under normal circumstances, be trying to start against a load. There should be enough hysterisis in the thermostat, or some sort of lock-out timer to prevent rapid cycling. Do you maybe have an air leak - lik in the door gasket? I could see how that would cause rapid cycling. RS I mentioned a month ago the dumb**** probably had ice build up inside the cap tube or possibly if equipped the TEV. You might ask where the moisture comes from in a sealed system. Not knowing the service history of this unit I could not tell you if it actually has ice build up or if the system had been worked on prior to dumb**** purchasing it used. But it sure displays the proper symptoms to be a distinct possibility 'Scuse me, but Igor is hardly a "dumb****." He can afford to pay professionals, but likes to do things himself, and isn't embarassed about asking for help. There's a lot to be learned from his approach to these things. |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-21, HVAC wrote:
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... Look dude.... Just ****can the thing and buy another one. And PLEASE just shut the **** up. Have a nice day! :-) Just curious why are you so ****y, ****y? This is me being NICE. a slow day? Customers not calling? I've never been so busy. Seriously. I do commercial only and all I can say is WHAT recession? So, say, what would you say if you were in a nasty mood? i |
Refrigerator not working again
On Sep 21, 3:18*pm, Ignoramus25344 ignoramus25...@NOSPAM.
25344.invalid wrote: If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Friday in Illinois the tax rebate is on again for one day, and I think Best Buy is giving another 15% off, thats 30% off, you would be a fool not to get a new frige, or get a repairman and fix that dying horse. |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... ****y? This is me being NICE. a slow day? Customers not calling? I've never been so busy. Seriously. I do commercial only and all I can say is WHAT recession? So, say, what would you say if you were in a nasty mood? I'm always in a good mood. Now **** off, asshole. -- "I'll stick my knife right down your throat, baby and it hurts." |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message
... On 2010-09-21, Bill wrote: "Ignoramus25344" wrote in message If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. And a month ago I said... Get a refrigerator thermometer (kitchen stuff department of stores), then keep an eye on the temperature. If there was a lot of water which came out from having it off while you fixed it, and this happens again in a th or so, suspect the defrost/heater/timer. \ Thanks As a matter of fact, there was not much water (none that I could see) that came out. i To test this theory, put all your food in ice chests and turn off the fridge for 24 hours with the door open. Then start it back up and see if it works for another month. There are also pans in the bottom of fridges to catch water. See if that is full after 24 hours. If it is "frost free", these have a timer which shuts off the compressor, then turns on a heating element on the freezer coils. This defrosts the freezer portion every so often.. The timer or the heating element can stop working. You may be able to remove a panel in the freezer portion and see the coils if they are hidden. If you see a big block of ice, then that is the problem. Air can not be circulated into the refrigerator if ice is blocking the air flow. |
Refrigerator not working again
On 09/21/2010 03:18 PM, Ignoramus25344 wrote:
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. Yeah, I thought this might happen! Well, this thermistor capacitor start scheme sounds pretty crummy to me. If the power gets a short glitch, even a couple cycles of the line, that may allow the compressor to nearly stop when there is high pressure in the condenser side. Then, power comes back and the thermistor is hot, so it doesn't restart. There is a thing called a "sinpac" switch, currently manufactured by Stearns. It uses a voltage sensing chip and a triac to control the start winding. It is made as a replacement for shot centrifugal switches, but is also great on motors where such a switch can't be used, like refrigerator compressors. At least through the channels I got one a while ago, they are expensive, but I'll bet a refrigeration shop will carry them much cheaper. There are also electronic modules, often used in the heating/cooling trade, to prevent "short-cycling". They are just wired in series with a motor, and will shut it off for some number of minutes whenever there is a power interruption. Of course, you may just have a defective compressor, and it is slowly seizing up, and will eventually lock up for good. I converted a central air conditioning system from capillary tube to expansion valve some years ago, and had problems with the compressor failing to start. I installed a "hard start kit" from my friendly local A/C supply shop. This was a potential relay and a BIG starting cap. It augments the run cap when starting, and greatly increases starting torque. It solved the problem. I don't know if this is the kind of problem this unit is having, and you might have to instrument it to find out what the cause is. It could be a bad compressor, it could be a bad starting system design, it could be a program problem in the computerized controller that is occasionally trying to stop and restart the compressor too quickly, it could be a mechanical timer on the defrost that has that same effect, or it could even be low line voltage or a worn-out wall socket making poor contact. The friendly local A/C supplier isn't so friendly anymore, I have to show them my EPA "green card" to get them to sell anything to me. The trade prices on stuff just blows me away. I needed a run cap for our current A/C unit a couple years ago, showed them my green card, and got a HUGE run cap for about $7.50. I walked in there expecting to pay $50 for it. Jon |
Refrigerator not working again
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message ... If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i My life experience (62 years so far) is that when refrigerators start acting up, unless it's a fix that costs less than $50, it is cheaper to dump it and get another. In today's market, nice fridges are cheap. About as much as a compressor job, and the compressor repair man has a warranty that is good until he's out of sight. Just me. Steve Heart surgery pending? Read up and prepare. Learn how to care for a friend. http://cabgbypasssurgery.com |
Refrigerator not working again
Wouldn't he call a refrigeration professional, instead?
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Mike Hocksbigg" wrote in message ... Call a ****ing professional service tech you nut-job. |
Refrigerator not working again
I filtered ignor-anus a while back. Can't remember why. Crude
language, being a general PIA, somethng like that. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Mike Hocksbigg" wrote in message ... Call a ****ing professional service tech you nut-job. Wound pretty tight today aren't we? Yep. |
Refrigerator not working again
Ignoramus25344 wrote:
If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i Your motor has lack of lubrication and is seizing up. Since it's in a sealed can you can't fix it. Putting lubrication in the coolant could help but you can't do that either without unsoldering connections and capturing the coolant and could cost more to fix than to throw out and buy a new one. -- LSMFT I look outside this morning and everything was in 3D! |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 17:53:45 -0400, "HVAC" wrote:
"Ignoramus25344" wrote in message m... Look dude.... Just ****can the thing and buy another one. And PLEASE just shut the **** up. Have a nice day! :-) Just curious why are you so ****y, ****y? This is me being NICE. Then you are normally a dick? a slow day? Customers not calling? I've never been so busy. Seriously. I do commercial only and all I can say is WHAT recession? So you do lots of work for mascochists? Or are you simply a prick to those that dont hire you? Gunner I am the Sword of my Family and the Shield of my Nation. If sent, I will crush everything you have built, burn everything you love, and kill every one of you. (Hebrew quote) |
Refrigerator not working again
"Stormin Mormon" fired this volley
in : Wouldn't he call a refrigeration professional, instead? They're pretty scarce. He might be better with an F-ing professional, instead. We had a "refrigeration professional" out to the factory a three months ago to replace an A/C compressor under warrantee. Long story short... I had to do (actually completely UN-do, clean the work, and RE-do) the brazing for him. He couldn't lick all the leaks. To his defense, it was a BAD position in which to work, he was a short little sucker, the unit was tall, and it was a tiny, tight workspace inside the coil of that unit. But damn... I'm just a pyrotechnics guy, and _I_ was able to Sil-Flo that thing down tight in one try. So much for "refrigeration professionals". Yeah... I know there are some. I learned to braze from one. But this guy's was the sort of skills I see all the time over in alt.hvac. And they SCREAM about how they're the only ones competent to work on systems. Hell... half of them can't figure out which way is "up" for liquid feed with R410a. (or why),(and it's printed on the bottle) LLoyd |
Refrigerator not working again
jeff_wisnia fired this volley in
: Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. He better try the comic thing... he can't make it as a refrigeration professional no matter how hard he tries. LLoyd |
Refrigerator not working again
Ignoramus25344 fired this volley in
: Just curious why are you so ****y, a slow day? Customers not calling? no... he's a "refrigeration professional", and doesn't want anyone to figure out the four or five pages of knowlege that constitutes his "professional advantage" over ordinary laymen. LLoyd |
Refrigerator not working again
wrote: On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:44:56 -0700, "Steve B" wrote: "Ignoramus25344" wrote in message m... If you recall, a month or so ago I posted about a refrigerator not working. The compressor unit in it would keep trying to start and would be unable to start, tripping an overload relay. After some "time off" to let the system cool, the fridge started just fine. I also replaced a capacitor and relay (which was very cheap and possibly not needed) and thought that I was done. However, since yesterday it started having trouble again. Letting it cool down for a couple of hours would get it started, only to find it unable to restart a few hours later. What could be the culprit here? Unlike last time, there is no emergency, as we have less food and all our food easily fits in another fridge. The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. i My life experience (62 years so far) is that when refrigerators start acting up, unless it's a fix that costs less than $50, it is cheaper to dump it and get another. In today's market, nice fridges are cheap. WTF do YOU shop ? The ****ing things cost what a CAR used to cost. New. Yet there is almost always a free on on Freecycle or Craigslist. -- Politicians should only get paid if the budget is balanced, and there is enough left over to pay them. |
Refrigerator not working again
"Michael A. Terrell" fired this volley in
m: Yet there is almost always a free on on Freecycle or Craigslist. I keep my "beer fridge" out in a roofed but not enclosed part of the barn. It rusts out completely in about four to five years. So, I replace it with another $50-$75 unit off the various lists and/or swap sheets. $20 a year isn't too much to pay for a working fridge. LLoyd |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 20:54:31 -0500, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
jeff_wisnia fired this volley in : Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. He better try the comic thing... he can't make it as a refrigeration professional no matter how hard he tries. I know enough not to employ the shotgun approach. However if you think ****ing away ten times the cost of having a pro diagnose it correctly is the way to go, then don't let anybody stop you. |
Refrigerator not working again
The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. Its a freakin Kenmore.... call Sears and have a guy come out and fix it, or you can quit screwing around and buy a new one. |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-22, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
"Stormin Mormon" fired this volley in : Wouldn't he call a refrigeration professional, instead? They're pretty scarce. He might be better with an F-ing professional, instead. We had a "refrigeration professional" out to the factory a three months ago to replace an A/C compressor under warrantee. Long story short... I had to do (actually completely UN-do, clean the work, and RE-do) the brazing for him. He couldn't lick all the leaks. To his defense, it was a BAD position in which to work, he was a short little sucker, the unit was tall, and it was a tiny, tight workspace inside the coil of that unit. But damn... I'm just a pyrotechnics guy, and _I_ was able to Sil-Flo that thing down tight in one try. So much for "refrigeration professionals". Yeah... I know there are some. I learned to braze from one. But this guy's was the sort of skills I see all the time over in alt.hvac. And they SCREAM about how they're the only ones competent to work on systems. Hell... half of them can't figure out which way is "up" for liquid feed with R410a. (or why),(and it's printed on the bottle) Lloyd, I mostly am after trying to understand what is happening, right now. I have a luxury of having plenty of time, due to having less food at home that fits onto one fridge. i |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-22, AZ Nomad wrote:
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 20:54:31 -0500, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote: jeff_wisnia fired this volley in : Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. He better try the comic thing... he can't make it as a refrigeration professional no matter how hard he tries. I know enough not to employ the shotgun approach. However if you think ****ing away ten times the cost of having a pro diagnose it correctly is the way to go, then don't let anybody stop you. The advantage that comes from DIY approach is that besides fixing the fridge, I learn something. i |
Refrigerator not working again
"Bill" wrote in message ... To test this theory, put all your food in ice chests and turn off the fridge for 24 hours with the door open. Then start it back up and see if it works for another month. There are also pans in the bottom of fridges to catch water. See if that is full after 24 hours. If it is "frost free", these have a timer which shuts off the compressor, then turns on a heating element on the freezer coils. This defrosts the freezer portion every so often.. The timer or the heating element can stop working. You may be able to remove a panel in the freezer portion and see the coils if they are hidden. If you see a big block of ice, then that is the problem. Air can not be circulated into the refrigerator if ice is blocking the air flow. If icing is the problem there is also a thermostat in series with the heating element. If that is bad the heater will not function. BTDT. Art |
Refrigerator not working again
On 2010-09-22, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
Ignoramus25344 fired this volley in : Just curious why are you so ****y, a slow day? Customers not calling? no... he's a "refrigeration professional", and doesn't want anyone to figure out the four or five pages of knowlege that constitutes his "professional advantage" over ordinary laymen. Does that refrigeration knowledge amount to so little? Any textbook you would recommend? I cannot believe that, after fixing and retrofitting my Bridgeport Interact CNC mill, I cannot ever properly diagnose a bad Sears refrigerator. I started knowing nothing about CNC mills and now, thanks to all the great help I got, I have a working CNC machine. Maybe I can fix the fridge too. i |
Refrigerator not working again
AZ Nomad fired this volley in
: I know enough not to employ the shotgun approach. However if you think ****ing away ten times the cost of having a pro diagnose it correctly is the way to go, then don't let anybody stop you. Ig is a smart guy. He can learn enough to save him ten times over what it would cost, just by fiddling around with a unit that isn't critical to him anyway. LLoyd |
Refrigerator not working again
"Lloyd E. Sponenburgh" wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" fired this volley in m: Yet there is almost always a free on on Freecycle or Craigslist. I keep my "beer fridge" out in a roofed but not enclosed part of the barn. It rusts out completely in about four to five years. So, I replace it with another $50-$75 unit off the various lists and/or swap sheets. $20 a year isn't too much to pay for a working fridge. I haven't bought a fridge in the last 25 years. In fact, I just picked up a free apartment or dorm sized fridge over the weekend that looks brand new. I've never bought a new microwave oven, and the most I've ever paid was $2. I have four at the moment, and I'm deciding which ones I'll keep. I've only bought two new televisions in the last 40 years. Most everything else is picked up not working and repaired. -- Politicians should only get paid if the budget is balanced, and there is enough left over to pay them. |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 21:56:44 -0500, Ignoramus25344 wrote:
On 2010-09-22, AZ Nomad wrote: On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 20:54:31 -0500, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote: jeff_wisnia fired this volley in : Keep your day job AZ. You aren't going to make it as a comic. He better try the comic thing... he can't make it as a refrigeration professional no matter how hard he tries. I know enough not to employ the shotgun approach. However if you think ****ing away ten times the cost of having a pro diagnose it correctly is the way to go, then don't let anybody stop you. The advantage that comes from DIY approach is that besides fixing the fridge, I learn something. For some things, it just isn't economical. The shotgun approach -- replacing parts without reason is never economical. |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 21:56:03 -0500, Steve wrote:
The refrigerator is a Kenmore made by Amana with fancy electronic front control. Its a freakin Kenmore.... call Sears and have a guy come out and fix it, or you can quit screwing around and buy a new one. His time isn't worth anything. He'd rather be the first person on the block with a fridge that cost him five grand than pay $200 for labor. |
Refrigerator not working again
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 22:26:25 -0500, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
AZ Nomad fired this volley in : I know enough not to employ the shotgun approach. However if you think ****ing away ten times the cost of having a pro diagnose it correctly is the way to go, then don't let anybody stop you. Ig is a smart guy. He can learn enough to save him ten times over what it would cost, just by fiddling around with a unit that isn't critical to him anyway. You need more than a fiddle to perform refrigeration repair. |
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