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โJun-21-2021 11:12 AM
wopachop wrote:
Ok pretend the temp setting has the fins at 30F so the air temp will read roughly 40F.
If you dont touch those settings, and leave the fridge closed for days, why would you see a fridge air temp down at 35 or 36F? The heating element should have turned off back when fridge air temp was closer to 40F.
โJun-21-2021 10:12 AM
โJun-20-2021 09:28 PM
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โJun-20-2021 11:47 AM
โJun-20-2021 04:50 AM
wopachop wrote:
I think youre way off with #1 and #2 Doug. Thanks for helping though.
#1. The tstat runs in cycles, no? It cools until the probe reaches a resistance. Then the burning stops. Once the resistance rises to a certain level the burning starts again. Is that not a cooling cycle? Whatever you want to call it, that is the topic im hoping to discuss.
#2. I agree the air temp will vary slightly from food temp. But they are very close and in my experience you can measure air temp and get a good idea what the food temp is. To say "NOT AT ALL" is plain silly. Ive been gauging air temp right next to a bottle of water with a dial thermometer in it. Promise they are always very close. Enough to determine if your fridge is cooling properly or if youre running a bit warm come summertime.
โJun-19-2021 09:53 PM
Nv Guy wrote:The probe on the fins controlling temp is much different than an air temp thermometer telling you current air temp.wopachop wrote:
I think youre way off with #1 and #2 Doug. Thanks for helping though.
#1. The tstat runs in cycles, no? It cools until the probe reaches a resistance. Then the burning stops. Once the resistance rises to a certain level the burning starts again. Is that not a cooling cycle? Whatever you want to call it, that is the topic im hoping to discuss.
#2. I agree the air temp will vary slightly from food temp. But they are very close and in my experience you can measure air temp and get a good idea what the food temp is. To say "NOT AT ALL" is plain silly. Ive been gauging air temp right next to a bottle of water with a dial thermometer in it. Promise they are always very close. Enough to determine if your fridge is cooling properly or if youre running a bit warm come summertime.
Back when I was in the RV biz, if you called Dometic tech support and reported interior air temp rather than the temp from a container of water, they would all but hang up on you.
Air temp is unreliable - you need a thermal mass to determine actual accurate interior temp.
Why do you think the manufacturers attach the themistor to the refer fins (thermal mass) as opposed to just let it dangle in the wind?
โJun-19-2021 09:29 PM
wopachop wrote:
I think youre way off with #1 and #2 Doug. Thanks for helping though.
#1. The tstat runs in cycles, no? It cools until the probe reaches a resistance. Then the burning stops. Once the resistance rises to a certain level the burning starts again. Is that not a cooling cycle? Whatever you want to call it, that is the topic im hoping to discuss.
#2. I agree the air temp will vary slightly from food temp. But they are very close and in my experience you can measure air temp and get a good idea what the food temp is. To say "NOT AT ALL" is plain silly. Ive been gauging air temp right next to a bottle of water with a dial thermometer in it. Promise they are always very close. Enough to determine if your fridge is cooling properly or if youre running a bit warm come summertime.
โJun-19-2021 07:38 PM
โJun-19-2021 04:02 PM
โJun-19-2021 03:14 PM