"Mick IOW" <
mrcy...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:pom99b50vdv6p2mgk...@4ax.com...
This reminds me of a friend who I've known since university. She did
physics, so she really ought to know about these things... She had
complained on Facebook that her fridge was not getting really cold. Various
people made the point about putting a lot of newly-bought shopping (at room
temperature) into it and that it may take a while after that to get back to
the correct temp.
Then she threw in a bouncer. "Does it matter that my fridge doesn't have a
door on it - the door fell off a while ago". You could tell from the various
responses on Facebook that people were trying to be very polite and
restrained, while wanting to say "You silly moo. Of *course* it matters! How
the F is the fridge supposed to keep cool if all the cold air is falling out
of the fridge and being replaced by room temp air".
She muttered something about placing lots of bottles of Coke at the front of
the shelves to make a sort of partial door, but I still can't work out what
was going on. It seems that the fridge had sort-of worked (though the
compressor ran 24/7) for several years but now it wasn't. The poor motor had
probably finally seized up through overheating and over-use.
Some people!
Going back to you problem. I had a deep freeze that sometimes failed to seal
properly at one corner - you could see condensation on the outside of the
case at that point. I found that once it had got into that state, where one
but of the rubber seal was not making a good contact, the best remedy was to
use a bit of sellotape to hold that part of the door tightly shut for a few
hours, after which time the seal had returned to normal and/or the freezer
had cooled down to -18, and then you could remove the sellotape and open and
close the door as normal.