Forum Discussion
- joebedfordNomad IIMy residential fridge has a water reservoir for chilled water. It's not on the ice tray circuit. Don't you have to winterize that too?
- ENG2242ExplorerThanks guy’s, done.
- mgirardoExplorerWe have a GE Residential Fridge with an ice maker only. I have read online and watched videos for other refrigerators that have a button or a solenoid that can be jumped to force the ice maker to demand water, but there is nothing in the owners manual about either and I haven't been able to find one looking at the fridge.
Anyway, what I do is just winterize the rest of the RV, then with a mostly full bottle of antifreeze, I just leave the pump on with the suction tube still in the bottle. I leave the fridge on and wait. The first tray of cubes to come out are usually pink ice cubes, then eventually, it'll be mostly slush coming out. Once it is all slush, I know all the water is out and I am done.
When it comes time to de-winterize, we usually wait a few days of making ice cubes, throwing them out as they are made. Then after a few days, all the anti-freeze taste is gone.
-Michael - IF your refer has a built in filter, the filter will remove the PINK in the Antifreeze and you will see clear water. Do NOT know if this degrades the operation and freeze point of the Antifreeze. Doug
- Edd505ExplorerWhats to stop you from installing a shut off in the water line?
- DutchmenSportExplorerIf you live in it, and still want to use the "pink stuff", as stated above, then simply turn off the shut-off valve that runs to the refrigerator and disconnect the line running running to the refrigerator and let gravity drain it. Then bleed the water that runs to the shut off valve until it turns pink.
When unwinterizing, run clear water to the shut off valve until there is no more foam or after taste. Once clear, reconnect the line to the shut off valve and and run normally again. - wa8yxmExplorer IIII would do one of three things.
1 Remove water line (Winterize it as you do rest of RV) and cycle the Ice Maker manually Allowing it to drain back due to gravity. YOu can also disconnect and remove the solenoid and either power it for less than 1 minute and blow it out or take it indoors to the warm spot. (Don't forget where you hid it for the winter)
2: Hook up air and cycle and let it blow out into ice tray
3: Eventually the line from solenoid to ice tray splits and makes a mel of a hess spraying water all over the outside compartment... When that happened to me I pulled the beast and .. Well.. Did not bother replacing it when we re-did the cooling unit.. I use a "Counter top" model now days.
On edit. And glad I am of that counter top unit (it makes up to 26 Pounds of Ice a day) as when the cooling unit failed it was 2.5 wees of no fridge. But I do have a good old poly foam "Colman Cooler" (Ice chest) Genuine coleman brand at that.. And that ICe maker kept it in ice till the fridge was ready to refill.. So the only food I had to throw out..... Should have been tossed long time ago. - rk911Explorer
ENG2242 wrote:
Thank you for your responses!! One caveat, I live in the RV.!
then winterize it the fridge the EZ way...point it south or southwest and keep going till night time temps are above freezing. - DFordExplorer
ENG2242 wrote:
Then find the shut off in the water line that feeds the refrigerator and shut it off. Disconnect the line at the valve and drain it. Take both sides off the ice maker solenoid valve and let them drain - blowing the out would be best. That way, the back of the refrigerator can get a cold as the outdoors and no harm will come from it.
Thank you for your responses!! One caveat, I live in the RV.!
(The more information you give us to start with, the better the answers will be.) - ENG2242ExplorerThank you for your responses!! One caveat, I live in the RV.!
About Technical Issues
Having RV issues? Connect with others who have been in your shoes.24,190 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 22, 2025