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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Hi all,
our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? It's quite a posh one with a digital display for setting the temperature of the fridge and freezer separately. Cheers PJ |
#2
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On May 15, 10:26*am, wrote:
Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? It's quite a posh one with a digital display for setting the temperature of the fridge and freezer separately. Cheers PJ light bulb, glass chopping boards. NT |
#3
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, recharging equipment, recharging valve, the correct refrigerant, specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor .... However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? It's quite a posh one with a digital display for setting the temperature of the fridge and freezer separately. Cheers PJ light bulb, glass chopping boards. NT |
#4
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#5
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On 15/05/2011 12:53, Adrian C wrote:
On 15/05/2011 10:26, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? It's quite a posh one with a digital display for setting the temperature of the fridge and freezer separately. FF4DK or FF4DX? Oh S**&, scrap that - no digital display on those. (just heartache) Mind ya, if you take the presumed still working digital electronics out and stick it on eBay, someone would be grateful. -- Adrian C |
#6
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On May 15, 12:36*pm, "Mr Pounder"
wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. NT |
#7
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. R12 is now banned in the UK. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... NT |
#8
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On May 15, 5:37*pm, "Mr Pounder"
wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago).. Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. R12 is now banned in the UK. Lots of old R12 kit still in use, but the OP's wont be R12. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... if it was originally used with the same refrigerant it would work. I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... NT |
#9
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 5:37 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. It is highly flammable. This stuff gets hot in the condensing coils, it gets hot in the compressor. If the brazing is not done correctly it could leak out -- bang! Some freezers have mild steel pipes in the insulation. These are prone to rotting - leaking. The evaporator plate is prone to leakage. People defrost with a knife and stab it to death ---- hiss. Just where have you seen butane or propane being used in domestic refrigeration? R12 is now banned in the UK. Lots of old R12 kit still in use, but the OP's wont be R12. It might well be R12 depending on the age of his fridge freezer. Some of the old LEC stuff is still rumbling along on R12. The upgrade was R134A. There is a drop in replacement for R12 but you need to change the dryer. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical Well? specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... if it was originally used with the same refrigerant it would work. Unfortunately not. It is just not that easy. I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... Hmmmm NT |
#11
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On May 15, 10:26*am, wrote:
Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? It's quite a posh one with a digital display for setting the temperature of the fridge and freezer separately. Cheers PJ There was a gardening programme on the box a few years back which had several suggestions. I can't remember all of them, but: (a) a seed store, (b) on its back as a compost bin, (c) ditto with holes filled as a water-butt. Chris |
#12
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On May 15, 9:14*pm, "Mr Pounder"
wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 5:37 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message .... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. It is highly flammable. This stuff gets hot in the condensing coils, it gets hot in the compressor. |
#13
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 9:14 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 5:37 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. It is highly flammable. This stuff gets hot in the condensing coils, it gets hot in the compressor. If the brazing is not done correctly it could leak out -- bang! Some freezers have mild steel pipes in the insulation. These are prone to rotting - leaking. The evaporator plate is prone to leakage. People defrost with a knife and stab it to death ---- hiss. that's why it wasn't used here for so many decades. But stats from where its long been used in Africa have shown that in practice the risk is as good as zero. African stats .... Just where have you seen butane or propane being used in domestic refrigeration? First time I saw it here was a new Proline fridge freezer. They're easily spotted as they have a flame warning sign on the back. Jesus! Cheaper and cheaper crap. R12 is now banned in the UK. Lots of old R12 kit still in use, but the OP's wont be R12. It might well be R12 depending on the age of his fridge freezer. 3 years old won't be R12. He bought it second hand 3 years ago. Some of the old LEC stuff is still rumbling along on R12. The upgrade was R134A. There is a drop in replacement for R12 but you need to change the dryer. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical Well? Fridge freezers normally have the quantity on the ratings plate. You could always google for the people that do this. specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... if it was originally used with the same refrigerant it would work. Unfortunately not. It is just not that easy. I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... Hmmmm NT "In highly purified form, propane (R-290) can serve as a direct replacement in mechanical refrigeration systems designed to use R-12, R-22 or R-134a chloro- or fluorocarbon based refrigerants." Hardly a home repair job. |
#14
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On May 16, 9:56*am, "Mr Pounder"
wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 9:14 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 5:37 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message .... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. It is highly flammable. This stuff gets hot in the condensing coils, it gets hot in the compressor. If the brazing is not done correctly it could leak out -- bang! Some freezers have mild steel pipes in the insulation. These are prone to rotting - leaking. The evaporator plate is prone to leakage. People defrost with a knife and stab it to death ---- hiss. that's why it wasn't used here for so many decades. But stats from where its long been used in Africa have shown that in practice the risk is as good as zero. African stats .... Just where have you seen butane or propane being used in domestic refrigeration? First time I saw it here was a new Proline fridge freezer. They're easily spotted as they have a flame warning sign on the back. Jesus! Cheaper and cheaper crap. Lower cost, more energy efficient, risk insignificant. Its good engineering. R12 is now banned in the UK. Lots of old R12 kit still in use, but the OP's wont be R12. It might well be R12 depending on the age of his fridge freezer. 3 years old won't be R12. He bought it second hand 3 years ago. Some of the old LEC stuff is still rumbling along on R12. The upgrade was R134A. There is a drop in replacement for R12 but you need to change the dryer. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical Well? Fridge freezers normally have the quantity on the ratings plate. You could always google for the people that do this. specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... if it was originally used with the same refrigerant it would work. Unfortunately not. It is just not that easy. I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... Hmmmm NT "In highly purified form, propane (R-290) can serve as a direct replacement in mechanical refrigeration systems designed to use R-12, R-22 or R-134a chloro- or fluorocarbon based refrigerants." Hardly a home repair job. People have done it succesfully. Anyone can google. End of story. |
#15
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![]() "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 16, 9:56 am, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 9:14 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 5:37 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 12:36 pm, "Mr Pounder" wrote: "Tabby" wrote in message ... On May 15, 10:26 am, wrote: Hi all, our Ariston FF stopped working suddenly (bought 2nd hand 3 years ago). Sounds like something inside the compressor has broken as it's a lot noisier than it used to be but zero cooling. I assume there's little point in repairing it. It depends. Its not too hard to swap over a compressor from an old machine. Some machines of that age use fuel gas refrigerant, which costs peanuts and is workable with. Brazing equipment, brazing rod, yup recharging equipment, recharging valve, the well... Well indeed .. correct refrigerant £1 from the hardware store if its butane/propane, or if an old R12 machine that you can recharge with that (often you can) It will not be butane or propane. I have never seen this in a domestic fridge freezer in the UK. It is in use now, I've seen it. It is highly flammable. This stuff gets hot in the condensing coils, it gets hot in the compressor. If the brazing is not done correctly it could leak out -- bang! Some freezers have mild steel pipes in the insulation. These are prone to rotting - leaking. The evaporator plate is prone to leakage. People defrost with a knife and stab it to death ---- hiss. that's why it wasn't used here for so many decades. But stats from where its long been used in Africa have shown that in practice the risk is as good as zero. African stats .... Just where have you seen butane or propane being used in domestic refrigeration? First time I saw it here was a new Proline fridge freezer. They're easily spotted as they have a flame warning sign on the back. Jesus! Cheaper and cheaper crap. Lower cost, more energy efficient, risk insignificant. Its good engineering. R12 is now banned in the UK. Lots of old R12 kit still in use, but the OP's wont be R12. It might well be R12 depending on the age of his fridge freezer. 3 years old won't be R12. He bought it second hand 3 years ago. Some of the old LEC stuff is still rumbling along on R12. The upgrade was R134A. There is a drop in replacement for R12 but you need to change the dryer. Knowing how much refrigerant to put in if somebody has removed the sticker which is not always there. It can be for example 34 -120 grams. The amount is critical Well? Fridge freezers normally have the quantity on the ratings plate. You could always google for the people that do this. specialised tools, the correct replacement compressor or anything suitable. If you pick one with the same gas and similar wattage you'll be ok. Some repair jobs become worth doing if you don't get overly fussy. The specs will then shift a bit, you might find it only maintains temps upto 27C isntead of 28C ambient. Nar, any old compressor which has something like the same spec will not do. High pressure side/low pressure side.... if it was originally used with the same refrigerant it would work. Unfortunately not. It is just not that easy. I think a refurb compressor costs about 60 quid. Well .... Hmmmm NT "In highly purified form, propane (R-290) can serve as a direct replacement in mechanical refrigeration systems designed to use R-12, R-22 or R-134a chloro- or fluorocarbon based refrigerants." Hardly a home repair job. People have done it succesfully. Anyone can google. End of story. Hardly a home repair job. |
#16
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On Sun, 15 May 2011 10:26:22 +0100, pjlusenet wrote:
However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? If the sides are metal they'll make useful tops for workbenches... I'd see if there was any frame inside which could be useful (in pieces as needed) on other projects too, but that's just me :-) cheers Jules |
#17
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![]() "Jules Richardson" wrote in message ... On Sun, 15 May 2011 10:26:22 +0100, pjlusenet wrote: However, does anyone know if there are any bits worth saving off it? If the sides are metal they'll make useful tops for workbenches... I'd see if there was any frame inside which could be useful (in pieces as needed) on other projects too, but that's just me :-) cheers Jules The sides are cheap thin mild steel. Inside is foam insulation which hold the interior of the cabinet together. The only things maybe worth saving are the racks which can be used as .... dunno really. The light bulb will be 15W ..... |
#18
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On Mon, 16 May 2011 18:33:27 +0100, Mr Pounder wrote:
If the sides are metal they'll make useful tops for workbenches... I'd see if there was any frame inside which could be useful (in pieces as needed) on other projects too, but that's just me :-) The sides are cheap thin mild steel. Yes, I suppose they might be on a recent one... as I mentioned in another thread, our fridge is 30-odd years old and built like a sodding tank, as are most* of that vintage :-) * at least this side of the Pond anyway. I remember UK fridges and freezers typically being a lot smaller than US counterparts (you could almost live in ours, if it wasn't so flippin' cold) Inside is foam insulation which hold the interior of the cabinet together. The only things maybe worth saving are the racks which can be used as .... dunno really. Ahh, OK. Again, our ancient one definitely has a box-section steel frame at the bottom, I'm just not sure if it extends all the way to the top. cheers Jules |
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