Jul-01-2019 07:38 AM
Jul-05-2019 02:16 PM
Jul-05-2019 01:43 PM
dougrainer wrote:Buffblazer wrote:
Ok that makes sense. It was loose so I was wondering if it’s depth in and out of the burner mattered.
So I cleaned everything again, turned on the gas without anything attached to push any debris out of the line and reached up in the chimney and cleaned what I could.
Turned it on with the fans at 7:00 at a fridge temp of 80 and at 9:00 it was 55 ( I know I shouldn’t have opened it but I was curious) I shut off the fans and this morning it was at 25 degree. So that made me super happy. I kicked on the fans and will check it again tonight after a 85 degree day.
So, with NO fans, the refer got down to 25 degrees? If so, WHY would you operate the Fans? Remember, the point of refer convection is to flow air thru the Condensor fins, REMOVE the heat and flow out the upper vent. IF you force the air thru those fins TOO FAST, they will not remove the heat. So, maybe you have to fast air flow. Doug
Jul-05-2019 07:57 AM
philh wrote:ajriding wrote:
Im not disagreeing, I just saying more airflow will cool the fins faster…
What can happen with wrong fan placement is that the air gets turbulent and does not do a good job flowing through the fins.
Flow too fast, there's not enough time for heat transfer. HOWEVER, in our fridges, they depend entirely on convection for heat transfer. A fan can help increase the flow.
another guy: the cold output temp on Lo fan then med fan then hi fan. You will notice on LO fan, the output is COLDER. Because,
Jul-05-2019 06:57 AM
dougrainer wrote:
The ONLY way to test LP pressure is with a Manometer. Buying one for $60 is cheaper than paying your Local RV dealer to do a Manometer check
Jul-05-2019 06:33 AM
ajriding wrote:
Im not disagreeing, I just saying more airflow will cool the fins faster…
What can happen with wrong fan placement is that the air gets turbulent and does not do a good job flowing through the fins.
Jul-05-2019 06:09 AM
Jul-05-2019 05:59 AM
Buffblazer wrote:
Scooby: thanks for the advice, I think I will have to do that mod myself.
Doug: is there a way to test the LP pressure from home? Or do I need to take it in to the dealer?
Checked it this morning, temp was at 55 with no fans running. So Monday it was 80 during the day, cooled to 25 that night, over 80 that evening and now is at 55. The fluctuation is confusing me.
Jul-05-2019 05:56 AM
ajriding wrote:dougrainer wrote:
IF you force the air thru those fins TOO FAST, they will not remove the heat. So, maybe you have to fast air flow. Doug
Umm, never heard that one before….
Every other finned cooler (lawnmowers, motorcycles, electronics etc) cools better with faster air, Im not disagreeing, I just saying more airflow will cool the fins faster…
What can happen with wrong fan placement is that the air gets turbulent and does not do a good job flowing through the fins.
Odd that your fridge does this. I am not an expert on where the AC heating element is in relation to the flame.
Most common is when fridges are run out of level they quit working slowly. What happens is the chemicals get trapped in the coils and stuff burns and cakes up like concrete down at the burner bulb. I am wondering if you have some cooked stuff above the flame, but wherever the AC element is maybe not as much cooked stuff, thus is able to get the heat into the system better.
The temp solution is to remove fridge, turn upside down so the burnt stuff moves out of the way so the heat can do its job. This solution does not last forever, but buys you time.
If you have a decent size flame then it should be cooling better just 55. It should be a little bigger than a candle flame at least.
I have hears sounds from the fridge, but only at night when it is dead quiet. A roar is common from a boiler, but not a fridge, but the fridge sound is amplified through the chimney - its a roar sound, but not a loud one by any means.
Fas are good, but I dont think they address your situation given it works so well on AC.
If the fridge side is in direct sunlight then it will be hard to cool it. Eliminate this as a variable from AC to propane.
Jul-04-2019 11:51 AM
dougrainer wrote:
IF you force the air thru those fins TOO FAST, they will not remove the heat. So, maybe you have to fast air flow. Doug
Jul-03-2019 07:53 AM
Jul-03-2019 05:24 AM
Buffblazer wrote:
I usually run the fans when the temp is over 80 and in direct sunlight and turn them off at night. Been kind of trial and error to see how much they help or not.
Started off at 25 at 5:30 this morning and the gauge was over 85 when I got home at 6:00. Fans ran all day.
As for the fins, are you talking about the ones that are about half way up the fridge? If so, I have a fan that is directly underneath of those pointed up to draw the fresh inlet air up to the exhaust fans.
So that very well could be my issue. That fan is point blank blowing air over those fins. I went ahead and disconnected it and will see tomorrow when I run the fans for the heat if it makes a difference.
I’m curious though. When I had the camper in the garage when I first installed the fans, I never had an issue with the fridge not staying cold with the fans running, even the one blowing over the fins.
I was on AC power, but that shouldn’t make a difference between propane or AC for the heat on the Fins right?
Jul-03-2019 05:21 AM
Jul-02-2019 09:13 PM
Jul-02-2019 05:30 AM
Jul-02-2019 05:22 AM
Buffblazer wrote:
Ok that makes sense. It was loose so I was wondering if it’s depth in and out of the burner mattered.
So I cleaned everything again, turned on the gas without anything attached to push any debris out of the line and reached up in the chimney and cleaned what I could.
Turned it on with the fans at 7:00 at a fridge temp of 80 and at 9:00 it was 55 ( I know I shouldn’t have opened it but I was curious) I shut off the fans and this morning it was at 25 degree. So that made me super happy. I kicked on the fans and will check it again tonight after a 85 degree day.