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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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We have a pretty cold kitchen, particularly as it's not got central heating
in it and we've put a curtain in the open doorway to the dining room, which does have a radiator. The aim was to keep the dining room warm. The fridge part of the fridge freezer is now freezing things on a regular basis. I've replaced the thermostat, and we've put a fan heater in the kitchen as an experiment to keep it reasonably warm 24/7. Neither seems to have fixed the problem. I've tried turning the thermostat knob very slowly and cannot hear it click- even when I turn it all the way to "off" and the cabinet light goes out. I also cannot hear the compressor, though I can faintly hear the sound of coolant. I can't reliably hear the fridge switching on and off as I turn it on and off, so it seems there's some anti-cycling thing in there that's complicating matters. Obviously it works despite the silence because the thing is frozen! I'm at the point of ditching it and looking for seperate replacement fridge and freezer units that are stackable, so that in the future when we re-do the kitchen, they can un-stack. I can't seem to find any. Do they exist? The only way I've found so far is to get builtin units and get a kitchen unit that can hold both of them, one above the other. An alternative is to put a decent electronic temperature controller in there with display so I can see it's working. This should fix it but will cost around 60 quid for a cheap PID controller and power supply. And the hassle of mounting it, either as simple as a plastic box inside the fridge or going as far as cutting through the door to mount it properly in the panel. It also doesn't fix the design flaw of having a single thermostat and cooling system for both the fridge and the freezer parts so I may find that the freezer is then not cold enough. A third option is to get someone in to look at the fridge and fix it. However it will take a couple of weeks to confirm whether or not the fix has worked, and I don't like paying someone to do something when I can't tell whether it's been done or not until a considerable time after payment! Does anyone have any suggestions or comments? -- Dr. Craig Graham, Software Engineer Advanced Analysis and Integration Limited, UK. http://www.aail.co.uk/ |
#3
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Dave Baker wrote:
What can happen is ice builds up on the temperature sensor which stops it sensing properly so it stays on 24/7. Try defrosting it fully, getting all the ice out from behind the freezing panel, setting the knob to its minimum setting and then see what happens. Adjust it up in tiny stages if it works but stays too warm. On mine you only need to have the knob a tiny bit too high and it freezes solid but get the setting right and it's fine. The knob IS at the minimum setting. It's against a slight point of resistance which prevents it being accidentally switched off. There is ice, but not around the temperature sensor. To reduce the risk of damaging the new thermostat as I put it in, I've left it coiled up as far as possible as it was in its original packaging and slightly away from the back panel, so it's sampling the air temperature. However, I'd have thought it would be *better* from my point of view for the sensor to be buried in ice; it should then always be below the switch-on temperature and the fridge wouldn't start until the ice had thawed. Which would be a major problem in summer of course. The freezer part won't be controlled by the fridge knob. It'll be preset to a given temperature. But there's only one compressor. This means there cannot be independent control of the freezer. -- Dr. Craig Graham, Software Engineer Advanced Analysis and Integration Limited, UK. http://www.aail.co.uk/ |
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