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Travelin2's avatar
Travelin2
Explorer
Jun 01, 2016

Dometic fridge not cooling on gas

We have a 2003 Pleasureway class B van. It has a Dometic RM2353 fridge. It is the manual 3-way version with the piezo igniter. We recently took a trip to the keys and had problems keeping the fridge cold. Back home I unloaded the fridge, plugged in the van and turned the fridge on AC and set the thermostat to 6, that being two settings down from MAX. The next morning I found the refer section thermometer said 24 degrees and the freezer thermometer said 20 below 0. I shut the fridge off and left the door open for a couple of hours with the weather here in the mid 80s. The refer side was reading about 75 and the freezer was at 28 above. I turned the fridge to gas and lit it. After several hrs the refer side was only down to 44 and the freezer was at 24 above 0. The last two times I checked it during about a two hour span those temps were not changing. Here is the part that is strange to me and I'm sure it may mean something to you fellas that know about these units.

This is a small 3 cu ft fridge and both of the ventilation vents are on the side of the RV. I installed a baffle to reduce the clearance between the cooling fins and the side wall from 3 1/2 inches down to 1/2 inch. The RV was level. The gas supply is good. The thing that baffles me is when the fridge was on AC and cooling good I could feel a gentle breeze of warm air coming from the top ventilation grate. When I ran it on gas that warm breeze got much, much warmer to the point that my wife found the plastic ventilation grate too hot to hold her hand on. It was only slightly warm on AC. It seems the gas is running too much flame, it is a nice clean blue flame, and it never reduces in size as the flue temps go up. The flue is clear. The tin baffle at the top of the flue tube gets up around 400 degrees.

I'm thinking there must be some sort of sensor/flow valve system to regulate the temperature of the gas boiler by regulating the gas to the burner. Can someone explain whats going on here? Can the boiler run two hot? What regulates the boiler temp when on gas? Is the culprit a part I can purchase. This fridge is 13 years old, is that too old to bring back to usefulness? Would you fix this or cough up a Grand for a new one?
  • Thanks a bunch Old-Biscuit. You've been a great help. Will put everything back like it was and increase the clearance on the baffle I made. Hopefully everything will work.
  • Does your side vented frig not require a fan? I know the Norcold 641 does. Requirement is specified in the manual.

    We had cooling issues a couple years ago. It wasn't cooling reliably and randomly failed. It would cool too much when first turned on overshooting the settings and then not cool enough after a day or two, depending on the outside temps.

    Turned out to be the vent fan had failed.

    Cleaned everything and replaced the fan, about 2 years now with no issues.
  • Joe417 wrote:
    Does your side vented frig not require a fan? I know the Norcold 641 does. Requirement is specified in the manual.

    We had cooling issues a couple years ago. It wasn't cooling reliably and randomly failed. It would cool too much when first turned on overshooting the settings and then not cool enough after a day or two, depending on the outside temps.

    Turned out to be the vent fan had failed.

    Cleaned everything and replaced the fan, about 2 years now with no issues.


    I'm sure no expert but the manufacturer (Pleasureway) didn't include it originally. From what I learned from the guys helping me get things set up right on this forum, all the elements are in place for a good running fridge except one and that is circulation. After getting everything right and running for about 4 hrs. I had a local mobile RV tech stop by my house and have a look. I explained everything I had done and in checking things himself he found that the very lowest horizontal tube that carries the solution to the boiler area was extremely hot, indicating a blockage internally. His reasoning is that it will cool on AC because the blockage isn't complete and will allow enough flow to keep solution in that tube under the lower BTUs of the AC element. The gas burner he explained puts out much more heat and is boiling that tube dry and overheating the tube. He recommended a new replacement. I ask him about installing a new cooling unit and he said he would do it if I wanted but The cost is too close the the price of a new one this small. Another thing that made me think he wasn't trying to get in my wallet was that when I ask him about him getting one for me he said I would be better off financially buying it myself online. He didn't even charge me for stopping by. Stand-up guy.
  • You don't see techs like that around here.

    There isn't much to installing a new frig. I've pull my 6 cu.ft. unit twice, once by myself. Sat it on a rug and pulled it to the back door. It wasn't that heavy just a bit bulky to get hold of.

    Before I found the problem with ours, I was contemplating replacing it with a larger unit.

    You may be able to get a bit larger unit in the same space as you old unit, but the Pleasureways I've seen are pretty tight.

    You may want to research adding a cooling fan when you install a replacement. I think they are worth the effort. I added a second fan with a switch to act as a backup and/or help with the cooling when it gets really hot out.

    Good luck,