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Saintjude33's avatar
Saintjude33
Explorer
Jun 22, 2018

Older fridge not cooling

So this is the second season with our 'gently used' camper.

It's a 2004 Springdale 26' bunk. Every time we go to use it for a weekend/week or two, the fridge acts up. It's a Dometic RM2652, and I have the DIAGNOSTIC SERVICE MANUAL for reference. Here's my pattern:

I plug AC in about 48-72 hours before, pop on a freshly charged deep cycle battery and bleed the propane lines.

Turn the fridge button to ON and AUTO. After 12 hours the flue is hot to the touch, not just warm, but HOT! Based on that, I feel the electric burner is working. The fridge and freezer are at ambient temperature after the 12 hours. If I unplug any portion of the shore line (from the wall, from the plug converter, or the cooling unit itself) the propane fires up successfully. Also, if I push the AUTO/GAS button the lights change as they should, and the gas burner again successfully lights.

Again, I check 12 hours later and the flue is HOT, but the fridge is still at room temp.

So we had a little tantrum, bought a bunch of ice, and figured we would cooler it. We drove 45min-1 hour and set up camp, and on a whom I checked out the fridge, and it's cooled off considerably. 3-4 hours later, it's normal refer temp, and the freezer can hold ice cream without becoming milk.

I have a few friends who suggested something about the ammonia crystalizing, and if I were to rap on the Absorber Vessel, it should clear up the problem in the future.

Well, it happened again- plugged in the trailer Wednesday, not cool 12 hours later, switched to gas, not cold 12 hours later- flue is hot again.

The one thing I noticed, once the fridge had gotten cool, the absorber vessel was hot to the touch- is this normal? When it is NOT working correctly, the A/V is room temp, and the Liquid Temperature Exchanger is hot very close to the boiler, but only about 3-5 inches, and then it cools of. Should the whole system warm up? Is it a flow problem- could it be the ammonia crystalizing? What's a permanent fix for this?

15 Replies

  • Think I'd install a compressor fridge and be done with it. Don't mean a residential compressor fridge but a Danfoss (Seacop) compressor fridge. Very low amp draw, very efficient compressor, very good cooling and freezing if necessary.
  • The yellow residue is a sure sign the unit has a leak and shouldn't be used. A strong ammonia smell is another tip off that the coil unit is bad.

    Had a bad one years ago and helped a RV tech replace it. Not all that complicated and I've since watched videos and read postings that detail the work and think I could do one if I had too. Since you're handy, should be a breeze for you.

    I haven't used either of those outfits but you can search the various RV'ing forums for the names to see what comes up. I always check an unknown supplier by going to google and typing, "complaints about companies name" and though that doesn't always show something, very often it leads to some reviews.
  • I also have found RVCOOL.COM in the same price range- please let me know what you think.
  • The good thing is, so am I.

    From posts, youtube, and websites, the yellow stains are usually present- there is a small amount of yellow powder-like substance, but I originally thought it was pollen. It was on the accordion-like sheathing over the copper gas line. Should I assume it had a small leak and it's shot?

    If so, has anyone out there worked with this guy?

    https://rvcoolingunit.com/Default.aspx

    he seems reputable, and a new Amish for $655. We only run 3-4 weekends a year, and two weeks in July, so it would be more economical to get the rebuilt one to me- now we're looking at about 424 with the 'core'
  • Sounds like your cooling unit is going bad. You could replace the refer, about $1200 dollars. You could repace the cooling unit with a new Amish unit, about $700. Dollars. Or you could replace it with a dorm refer, about $300. Dollars plus the cost of an inverter and wiring. It all depends on how you camp, how often you camp and how long you plan to keep this trailer. Personally I would go with the Amish unit. But Im handy, and can fix things.

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