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: Refrigerator problem


Euro7r
01-21-2011, 04:52 PM
Need some help ASAP! The freezer side of my fridge isn't working. Everything is defrosting even when I have the setting set at coldest.

Anyone have any ideas of what to do?

My fridge is one of the side by side fridge/freezer made by GE.

Guy_LikeWhoa
01-21-2011, 05:01 PM
1)throw everything into refrigerator side
2)buy new fridge

W2K
01-21-2011, 05:03 PM
Call a guy to get it fixed or get a new fridge.
Posted via RS Mobile (http://www.revscene.net/forums/announcement.php?a=228)

LiquidTurbo
01-21-2011, 05:04 PM
Open it up, and vacuum the cooling fins. Maybe clogged with dust. But probably the compressor is broken. If you are handy, open up the back if you can.

Euro7r
01-21-2011, 05:11 PM
Yeah, I'm gonna open it up and see if anything is broken. Gonna do it after I eat some dinner.

hungryRR
01-21-2011, 05:11 PM
Where is the fridge located?
maybe somethings wrong with your thermostat?
I have a fridge in the garage and when it's too cold outside it doesn't work properly because the thermostat doesn't sense a difference in temperature [between the air outside vs the freezer] so it never turns on the compressor to the freezer

suzuka84
01-21-2011, 05:18 PM
your fridge is busted so buy a new one asap. The problematic side will probably cycle between working and not working so best bet will be to replace.

Culverin
01-21-2011, 05:21 PM
Inside your fridge, there is likely spout that gathers condensation.
Make sure it didn't ice up. Clean it out if necessary.

TheKingdom2000
01-21-2011, 06:25 PM
Need some help ASAP! The freezer side of my fridge isn't working. Everything is defrosting even when I have the setting set at coldest.

Anyone have any ideas of what to do?

My fridge is one of the side by side fridge/freezer made by GE.

Yeah, I'm gonna open it up and see if anything is broken. Gonna do it after I eat some dinner.

clearly you are confusing your priorities

Euro7r
01-21-2011, 06:46 PM
I have another freezer to store stuff, that's why I'm doing it after dinner

Euro7r
01-21-2011, 06:48 PM
Apparently, there's a lot of frosting inside the freezer for some reason. Is that even a good sign =/

Culverin
01-21-2011, 08:10 PM
Not sure. How was dinner?

DasHooch
01-21-2011, 08:54 PM
Fridge rookies...

Get a screwdriver and take off the back panel from inside the freezer. There I suspect you will find your coils have frosted over, such that air cannot pass through the heat exchanger. No flow means no spreading of cold.

So if you have a spare fridge/freezer you can just leave it off for a day with a drip bucket. If you a in a rush, a hair dryer will hurry things up, but keep it moving, you don't want to melt any plastic parts (you can also pour hot water on it, but it's generally too wet and wild).

So, after defrosting the freezer, you could just slap it back together, and it would work for about 3 days before frosting over again. You need to find out why it is not defrosting itself. Three components plus wiring can be suspected: the 'motherboard', accessible from the outer rear; the thermostat/switch that clips onto the coils (a little round thing with two wires); or most likely, the defrost heater. Yes, fridges heat up the cooling coils when the thermostat senses it is too cold (frosting over).

The heating element looks a like a cylindrical light bulb; it probably has a blackened part of the glass, just like a blown light bulb.

If it's the heater, go to Mabe in Vancouver and buy a replacement kit. They sell the thermostats too. You can replace both for material cost less than a repairman would charge to look at it. Also much cheaper than a new fridge, until the compressor fails 6 months later. The heater is easy to install with a screwdriver, the wiring is plug in sockets. The thermostat will probably require some wire snipping, stripping and soldering, if you're into that (cover it with something watertight).

You'll need the model number of the fridge for the replacements, it should be on the upper right side of the fridge. If you unscrew the switch holder for the temp settings, you might find a circuit diagram and spare list inside.

Euro7r
01-22-2011, 03:38 AM
Thanks DasHooch for the input. I let my freezer defrost over night and will take a look at it in the morning.

El Bastardo
01-22-2011, 06:55 AM
Is your refrigerator running?

Then you'd better go catch it

2 n r
01-22-2011, 08:07 AM
could be clogged with ice (due to cracks in your ice tray; common ) so unplug the fridge, take everything outta ur freezer, get a blow dryer and put it over the vent where cold air is suppose to pass and melt all the ice or if u dont have a blowdryer just wait til everything melts

Euro7r
01-22-2011, 12:17 PM
The defrost heater burnt out, need to go replace it.

daytona675
01-22-2011, 05:03 PM
from what you say, you've got a auto defrost issue.

evaporator is built up with ice, and not allowing air circulation.

how do you know the heater is burnt up? did you check it with a meter for continuity? i ever rarely see evap heater elements get burnt out.

Dragon-88
01-24-2011, 04:13 PM
yeah my fridges heating element went too.. Those damn glass bulbs are soo fragile.. I miss the old days when it was made of metal and invincible.. :D.. Either way weve already replaced it twice..

Narayan
01-24-2011, 08:50 PM
check to make sure the lines to the freezer are not frozen with ICE... i.e. where the COLD AIR BLOWS THROUGH to keep the freeze cold that its not rock solid.

Euro7r
01-24-2011, 09:57 PM
I'm trying to replace the defrost heater, but my model part changed and uses a two tube defrost heater instead of the single one that was originally manufactured with. It's the correct part.

But I'm having trouble tying up the pink + blue wire with a wire nut, it keeps on falling off. And it says to seal it with silicon? Going to do some google search and see how other people dealt with this.

tiger_handheld
01-24-2011, 10:09 PM
Before you google, have you had dinner yet?

Euro7r
01-24-2011, 10:36 PM
No dinner yet :fullofwin:

Phil@rise
01-25-2011, 11:53 AM
Is your refrigerator running?

Then you'd better go catch it

If it is your better catch it

orange7
01-25-2011, 01:19 PM
No dinner yet :fullofwin:

so what are you having for dinner tonight?:)

PJ
01-25-2011, 03:59 PM
Fridge rookies...

Get a screwdriver and take off the back panel from inside the freezer. There I suspect you will find your coils have frosted over, such that air cannot pass through the heat exchanger. No flow means no spreading of cold.

So if you have a spare fridge/freezer you can just leave it off for a day with a drip bucket. If you a in a rush, a hair dryer will hurry things up, but keep it moving, you don't want to melt any plastic parts (you can also pour hot water on it, but it's generally too wet and wild).

So, after defrosting the freezer, you could just slap it back together, and it would work for about 3 days before frosting over again. You need to find out why it is not defrosting itself. Three components plus wiring can be suspected: the 'motherboard', accessible from the outer rear; the thermostat/switch that clips onto the coils (a little round thing with two wires); or most likely, the defrost heater. Yes, fridges heat up the cooling coils when the thermostat senses it is too cold (frosting over).

The heating element looks a like a cylindrical light bulb; it probably has a blackened part of the glass, just like a blown light bulb.

If it's the heater, go to Mabe in Vancouver and buy a replacement kit. They sell the thermostats too. You can replace both for material cost less than a repairman would charge to look at it. Also much cheaper than a new fridge, until the compressor fails 6 months later. The heater is easy to install with a screwdriver, the wiring is plug in sockets. The thermostat will probably require some wire snipping, stripping and soldering, if you're into that (cover it with something watertight).

You'll need the model number of the fridge for the replacements, it should be on the upper right side of the fridge. If you unscrew the switch holder for the temp settings, you might find a circuit diagram and spare list inside.

This guy knows whats up. Are you an HVAC/Refrig/Engineer?

DasHooch
01-25-2011, 07:59 PM
Just a mechanical engineer. I also had the exact same problem in the summer.

OP: I guess you weren't lucky enough to have a plug in style heater. A solder gun and solder is pretty cheap, so is silicone gasket (I used some spare oil pan gasket maker). You can twist the wires around each other and drop hot solder on them to bind them. Then coat it in a big ball of silicone, cover with tape, and hide that hack wiring job back behind the panel.

daytona675
01-25-2011, 09:46 PM
i hope you got your defrost element in there.
use butt connectors and food grade silicone is seal the ends up, to prevent moisture getting into the connections.

find the defrost timer and advance it or if its electronic controlled you will have to find the sequence to get into the service program. activate the heater to make sure it works.

i'd double check the condition of your defrost thermostat, make sure it not popped open. i see that alot on certain GE's.

Euro7r
01-25-2011, 10:14 PM
It's fixed now, thanks for help.

TRDood
02-20-2012, 07:41 PM
Fuck. My fridge is not working, both top freezer and bottom cooler. It doesn't run at all and makes no sound. Only the light works so electricity is available.

Repair or buy a new fridge? I called up a few places and it looks like service calls are at least $60, plus hourly labour rate. Repaired sounds like a better option than having to haul a damn fridge back home and dispose the broken one.

What's a good fridge? or who would you recommend for repairs?

trollface
02-20-2012, 07:47 PM
Fuck. My fridge is not working, both top freezer and bottom cooler. It doesn't run at all and makes no sound. Only the light works so electricity is available.

Repair or buy a new fridge? I called up a few places and it looks like service calls are at least $60, plus hourly labour rate. Repaired sounds like a better option than having to haul a damn fridge back home and dispose the broken one.

What's a good fridge? or who would you recommend for repairs?

If you but a new one, a lot of places will pickup ur old one for free.

BillyBishop
02-20-2012, 08:20 PM
Holy shit, I learned a lot from this thread, haha.



Repair or buy a new fridge? I called up a few places and it looks like service calls are at least $60, plus hourly labour rate. Repaired sounds like a better option than having to haul a damn fridge back home and dispose the broken one.

I'd get the repair folks to come take a look for $60 and at least diagnose what the problem is.
If the difference is a couple hundred between repair and a new fridge, may as well buy a new one.
Like trollface said, many places will take your old one away; Trail Appliances did that for me a couple years ago.

godwin
02-20-2012, 08:21 PM
Sounds like the compressor is dead?

Fuck. My fridge is not working, both top freezer and bottom cooler. It doesn't run at all and makes no sound. Only the light works so electricity is available.

Repair or buy a new fridge? I called up a few places and it looks like service calls are at least $60, plus hourly labour rate. Repaired sounds like a better option than having to haul a damn fridge back home and dispose the broken one.

What's a good fridge? or who would you recommend for repairs?

matrixfwd
02-20-2012, 08:45 PM
my fridge is really loud when the engine cycles couple times an hour, it makes a humming sound and I just can't stand it... it works fine though, but I don't think the sound is normal.

anyone know what is causing this loud sound it's like.. hummm zzzzz hummm zzzz.... i live in a small townhome so I can hear it on the whole floor.

LP700-4
02-20-2012, 08:48 PM
^Get a new fridge? Our old one went bbbbzzzzzzzzzzzzzZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ for like half an hour straight frequently.
Didnt bother with repairs as it was like 10 years old.