โAug-03-2013 05:42 PM
โAug-04-2013 08:21 AM
Ozlander wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:MRF wrote:
My electrical components are sitting directly below my refrigerator. I sealed all the necessary areas and installed vents with 120 mm computer cooling fans to force cool air across my electronics and up across the back of my refrigerator area, then exhausted through my roof vent with another fan.
I may be misunderstanding this statement, but it sounds like you have opened up vents between the bottom of the refrigerator and electronics beneath it. This is a very bad idea- the base the refrigerator is sitting on must be sealed and vented out the side- assuming we are dealing with a standard gas/electric model. LP gas is heavier than air.
That is true. In case of a propane leak, you'd want the gas to vent to the outside, not the inside.
โAug-04-2013 08:12 AM
Chris Bryant wrote:MRF wrote:
My electrical components are sitting directly below my refrigerator. I sealed all the necessary areas and installed vents with 120 mm computer cooling fans to force cool air across my electronics and up across the back of my refrigerator area, then exhausted through my roof vent with another fan.
I may be misunderstanding this statement, but it sounds like you have opened up vents between the bottom of the refrigerator and electronics beneath it. This is a very bad idea- the base the refrigerator is sitting on must be sealed and vented out the side- assuming we are dealing with a standard gas/electric model. LP gas is heavier than air.
โAug-04-2013 07:48 AM
Chris Bryant wrote:MRF wrote:
My electrical components are sitting directly below my refrigerator. I sealed all the necessary areas and installed vents with 120 mm computer cooling fans to force cool air across my electronics and up across the back of my refrigerator area, then exhausted through my roof vent with another fan.
I may be misunderstanding this statement, but it sounds like you have opened up vents between the bottom of the refrigerator and electronics beneath it. This is a very bad idea- the base the refrigerator is sitting on must be sealed and vented out the side- assuming we are dealing with a standard gas/electric model. LP gas is heavier than air.
โAug-04-2013 07:28 AM
tenbear wrote:
If you are adding new wire to reach the switch position, use the same size wire that is currently used. If you use smaller wire you will need a smaller fuse. It is probably wired with # 14 wire if it has a 15 amp fuse.
โAug-04-2013 05:53 AM
MRF wrote:
My electrical components are sitting directly below my refrigerator. I sealed all the necessary areas and installed vents with 120 mm computer cooling fans to force cool air across my electronics and up across the back of my refrigerator area, then exhausted through my roof vent with another fan.
โAug-04-2013 05:40 AM
โAug-03-2013 08:44 PM
โAug-03-2013 08:42 PM
โAug-03-2013 08:40 PM
โAug-03-2013 08:26 PM
Harvey51 wrote:Make sure there is a fuse on the positive wire. An existing circuit should already be fused and adequate to add the fan loads. Otherwise add a new fuse near the battery.
Electricity goes around in a circuit, starting at the battery, going through the load and back to the battery. So you want to run it through the switch or thermostat so it can interrupt the flow. Just one wire will go through the switch, not two. The positive wire should be switched. Positive to the switch, then from the wire on the other side of the switch to the fan positive, then from its other wire back to the battery either through a ground or negative wire in the fridge.
โAug-03-2013 08:15 PM
โAug-03-2013 06:50 PM
โAug-03-2013 06:30 PM