On Tue, 16 Oct 2012 08:46:30 -0700, SMS <
scharf...@geemail.com>
wrote:
I had a Sears-Whrlpool-made fridge that was about 20 years old when I
noticed the air wasn't coming out the bottom. It took me weeks to
pull out the fridge to learn the problem. It was a mouse stuck in the
fan, a dried dead mouse. I just pushed out with something and I
expected the fridge would fail because of running too hot for weeks,
but it didn't. About 5 years ago, the same thing happened. Again it
ran without the fan spinning for weeks, and it was another dead dried
mouse.. And 3 years ago, when the fridge was 30 years old, the
thermostat failed. I replaced that with one from ebay, but the fan
motors are still fine and the fridge runs fine after 33 years, and has
no broken parts, except for the door gasket which is in place but has
a "cut" on the ouside, for part of the perimieter.
So what I tend to be saying is you don't need to replace that motor as
soon as it breaks, but otoh, I have an old well-made fridge and I hear
all the new ones are junk. I guess you could stop the fan for an hour
or two and use a remote thermometer to see how much the temperature of
the condensor coil increases.
Is my fan a legacy from when fridges would really overheat without
one?
(Of course I live alone so I don't use it as much as a family would.)