On Thu, 30 Apr 2020 11:03:25 -0700 (PDT), John-Del <
ohg...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>It might be "frozen".
I agree. I have a small "bar size" Kenmore/Sears fridge which
exhibits the same problem. The thermal sensor is inside a flexible
copper(?) pipe located near the back of the freezer section. As long
as the sensor is not coated in ice, the refrigerator and temperature
control work normally. However, when the freezer section becomes
coated with ice, with the thermal sensor also embedded in ice, the
thermostat stops working. One it's inside a block of ice, the thermal
sensor is always at the same temperature as the ice, no matter what
the refrigerator is doing. I could probably fix it by relocating the
temperature sensor, but I'm lazy and simply resign myself to
defrosting the refrigerator every 3 months or so. After defrosting,
things work as expected.
Hints:
1. Don't defrost the ice accumulation with a heat gun or propane
torch. Ice likes to explode when a small area is heated and there's
far too much plastic in the fridge to risk melting it.
2. Don't break loose chunks of ice with a screwdriver and a hammer. I
did that to my previous fridge and ended up punching a hole in the
cooling coils. No repair parts, no fix, so I had buy a new fridge.
3. To properly defrost such a fridge:
- Figure out how to catch any melt water. A paint roller tray
works for me.
- Empty the fridge from all food. This won't take long so the
food is not likely to be ruined.
- Put a pot of boiling water inside the fridge. Close the door,
and go do something else. Mine takes about 30 mins to melt
all the ice. To make things go faster, open the door occasional
and remove any chunks of ice that can be extracted. Toss into
sink.
- Clean up the inevitable mess from the bottom of the fridge
and the floor with a mop or sponge.
- Put food back into fridge, apply power, set thermostat to its
usual position, and live happily ever after.
--
Jeff Liebermann
je...@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060
http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS
831-336-2558