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โAug-12-2018 10:14 AM
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โAug-03-2018 10:16 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:aftermath wrote:
I might be wrong here but I don't believe the thermistor measures the temperature of the fins. I read somewhere, and it made sense to me at the time, that moving the thermistor up will cool your fridge down. Cold air pools in the bottom of the fridge. As the level of cool air fills the compartment it will reach the thermistor and then shut down the fridge. If you raise it, it will take longer to fill the cool air to this higher level and thus keep the fridge cooler. Is your thermistor loose? When you raise it, does it slide back down on its own?
Remember, these refrigerators do not have fans to circulate the inside air like ours at home do. Venting the fridge is also important. I have had almost no trouble with mine because, I believe, it vents through the top of the trailer. Some fridges vent through the side and usually need an additional fan to help with circulation.
Good luck with your troubleshooting.
Thermistors measure FIN Temp.
Moving thermistor ----if fridge does NOT have an temp settings that can be selected (AUTO TEMP CONTROL)
โAug-03-2018 07:27 PM
โAug-03-2018 09:03 AM
โAug-03-2018 06:00 AM
hawkeye-08 wrote:Good advice, there. Caig (brand) Deoxit D5 will remove oxidation and dirt from any mechanical connection like the thermistor terminal (if not soldered), the wire clip to the circuit board, the power and ground wires for both 12V and 120V operation.
When we first got our current trailer (used Arctic Fox 27T), it had some issues and went away after cleaning contacts and unplugging and plugging in some connectors. I have recently found out about a product called DeOxit that I might get to help with the connections.
Sometimes a cold solder joint will cause some issues also..
โAug-02-2018 08:32 PM
โAug-02-2018 04:14 PM
SidecarFlip wrote:
Simple and less expensive answer to an absorbtion fridge that don't work well.. A Danfoss Secop compressor fridge. Very efficient (residential units aren't they are power hogs). A Sanfoss Secop fridge is a duty cycle fridge. That is, the compressor (which is brushless and very efficient) runs only enough to hold a set temp and it automatically reduces power use by itself.
In cool down from ambient mode a Danfoss/Secop might pull 5 amps, but once it reaches set temp, it reduces it's power drain to less than 2 amps. About what an amonia fridge pulls with auxiliary fans installed.
Plus, no special venting and they are not affected by high ambient temps. Finally both Dometic and Norcold make drop in replacement units. Basically plug and play for about 800 bucks.
โAug-02-2018 02:39 PM
โAug-02-2018 12:56 PM
โAug-02-2018 12:34 PM