โSep-18-2018 02:36 AM
โSep-26-2018 11:49 AM
โSep-26-2018 09:47 AM
DrewE wrote:azrving wrote:
If I was staying with gas I would modify it differently then they do with the ARP type devices. The whole thing is flawed and insane from the very beginning. Resi or gas both have their pros and cons but right now I'm for the one that doesnt have as bad of a history of burning everything down. My old gas fridge was in excellent condition and had very little rust and was always level but it would be bad to return to a burned out rig or the worst part would be knowing that I left my dogs in a known fire trap. We all know what a cheesy industry RV's are but how did anyone ever let this whole thing continue on for so long? I dont think it's very hard to fix but it does require a little more money. It seems like it would be talked about on here.
Gas fridges have somewhat of an underserved reputation for fire danger. More RV fires stem from engine fires and, if memory serves, electrical fires than from fridges, and at least a fair chunk (not necessarily the majority) of fridge fires are due to things not specifically fridge related, like leaking connections to the propane system that could just as easily be found on any propane appliance.
Ammonia is not particularly inflammable; it has a fairly narrow band of concentration where it will burn. That, of course, is not very much consolation for anyone who has suffered due to a fridge fire; but it's equally wrong to think of an absorption fridge as though it were a bomb waiting to go off at the slightest provocation.
Far more beneficial, in my opinion, would be to use more fire-safe materials and construction methods in RVs so that they wouldn't generally go from having a small fire to being a raging inferno in half a minute or so.
โSep-26-2018 08:03 AM
azrving wrote:
If I was staying with gas I would modify it differently then they do with the ARP type devices. The whole thing is flawed and insane from the very beginning. Resi or gas both have their pros and cons but right now I'm for the one that doesnt have as bad of a history of burning everything down. My old gas fridge was in excellent condition and had very little rust and was always level but it would be bad to return to a burned out rig or the worst part would be knowing that I left my dogs in a known fire trap. We all know what a cheesy industry RV's are but how did anyone ever let this whole thing continue on for so long? I dont think it's very hard to fix but it does require a little more money. It seems like it would be talked about on here.
โSep-26-2018 06:23 AM
Bob E. wrote:Ralph Cramden wrote:jerryjay11 wrote:
Been in the business of servicing or repairing home refrigerators since retiring from the USAF in 97.
Just keep in mind that household refrigerators were not designed to withstand the bouncing of a TT and it's life expectancy can be shorter.
That's a great point, but will be ignored here and at every other RV forum in existence.
My parent's RV fridge died at 10 years old this year. They were quoted something like $1400 for a new one, not including installation. Since they camp with hookups 99% of the time, they went to Home Depot and bought a small residential fridge that fit the opening for a little over $300. They could replace that fridge 3 more times and still be almost $200 ahead. So basically, if the fridge lasts 2.5 years, it is worth it. Plus it keeps things colder and has more space in it...so long as you have hookups.
โSep-24-2018 02:21 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Foreign Jobs
I have had excellent luck with SAMSUNG brand. I own a Viking and two VestFrost refrigerators (with Danforth compressors) they are not low end models.
I've yet to meet a Samsung refrigerator owner down here that was not pleased with flawless service life.
SEARS sold Cold Spot refrigerators 60 years ago that seemed to be unbreakable and wear-out proof. They bought a chest freezer in 1948 that was going strong in 1999 with a different owner. Amazing.
โSep-23-2018 01:45 PM
โSep-22-2018 03:26 PM
Bob E. wrote:
Maybe it wasn't adjusted properly or something, and maybe that's why it failed after just 10 years (a tube carrying the ammonia cracked). But it was never really cold inside, especially when hot outside, even when new. We were new to RV's so we just figured they didn't work as good as the fridge in your house. We even kept cans of pop, water, and beer in a separate cooler on ice just so it was colder and we weren't opening the fridge as often. By the end of the week, I was always worried about the milk going sour.
โSep-22-2018 01:46 PM
โSep-20-2018 05:36 PM
โSep-20-2018 11:41 AM
pnichols wrote:Bob E. wrote:
Plus it keeps things colder and has more space in it...so long as you have hookups.
We haven't experienced those downsides with the 6.3 cu. ft. Norcold propane refrigerator in our RV.
6.3 cu. ft. is 6.3 cu. ft., and it happens that the 6.3 cu. ft. inside of our Norcold is plenty enough room for the two of us for at least a week or more . It has 5 coldness settings and we use it most of the time on setting 3. Setting 5 freezes stuff in the refrigerator section and keeps the freezer section less than zero (which is too cold to for on-tap-usable ice cream). A 10 degree freezer is perfect for ice cream and that is what setting 3 gets us in most conditions. We sometimes use Setting 4 when it's really hot outside.
I'm really scratching my head regarding all the complaints in the forums about poor RV propane refrigerator performance. Either they're not building the propane refrigerators like they used to (our RV is a 2005) ... or RV manufacturers don't know how to, or don't care to, install them properly anymore. :h
โSep-20-2018 10:58 AM
2oldman wrote:
I had a new Dometic installed in 2013 and it's been flawless. Doesn't even balk when it's 105ยฐ
โSep-20-2018 10:10 AM
pnichols wrote:I had a new Dometic installed in 2013 and it's been flawless. Doesn't even balk when it's 105ยฐ
I'm really scratching my head regarding all the complaints in the forums about poor RV propane refrigerator performance. Either they're not building the propane refrigerators like they used to (our RV is a 2005) ... or RV manufacturers don't know how to, or don't care to, install them properly anymore. :h
โSep-20-2018 10:08 AM
Bob E. wrote:
Plus it keeps things colder and has more space in it...so long as you have hookups.
โSep-20-2018 07:29 AM
Bob E. wrote:Just a slight inconvenience.
.. Plus it keeps things colder and has more space in it...so long as you have hookups.