  Wolfie00 My dog is an elitist Premium join:2005-03-12
| reply to SandShark Re: Refrigerator question -- defrost timer
I forgot to mention something too. As best as I can tell when the house gets warm (e.g.- it's a warm day but I don't turn on the A/C) the fridge does not get any warmer -- instead it just seems to run a little longer. But it just refuses to go below 40. It has separate thermostats for the freezer and fridge and both are turned to the lowest temperature, to no avail! That tends to suggest a control problem -- defrost timer or thermostat -- rather than something overheating. But the "click" is definitely not a thermostat -- it sounds like a big relay. -- "Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace" -- Dr. Albert Schweitzer "A dog is like a child who never grows old ... always there to love and be loved" -- Aaron Katcher
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  SandShark So it goes Premium,MVM join:2000-05-23 Santa Fe, TX clubs:
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| What you're describing regarding the temperature can be a control issue, but an intermittent problem with the overload or relay can keep the unit from getting down to temperature, also. I don't work on non-commercial refrigerator/freezers, so I'm trying to relate my experience with commercial reach-in refrigerators and freezers to your equipment. The click you describe sure sounds like the overload or relay, though. |
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 robbin Premium,MVM join:2000-09-21 Leander, TX | reply to Wolfie00 Open up the bottom -- get a pillow -- and just lay there and try to identify the click. It sounds like it is happening fairly often so it shouldn't be too hard.
It may help to unplug it and restart to get the click to happen sooner. |
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  SandShark So it goes Premium,MVM join:2000-05-23 Santa Fe, TX clubs:
·Verizon Online DSL
| said by robbin :Open up the bottom -- get a pillow -- and just lay there and try to identify the click. It sounds like it is happening fairly often so it shouldn't be too hard. It may help to unplug it and restart to get the click to happen sooner. I've got rain gear, coats and jackets, gloves, funny looking hats, an umbrella and various tarps on my van. A pillow is on my list. Really, though, that's a good suggestion for trying to pinpoint that click. |
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  Wolfie00 My dog is an elitist Premium join:2005-03-12
1 edit | reply to robbin said by robbin :Open up the bottom -- get a pillow -- and just lay there and try to identify the click. It sounds like it is happening fairly often so it shouldn't be too hard. It may help to unplug it and restart to get the click to happen sooner. I can pretty much guarantee what I would hear -- that it is coming from the bottom area around the compressor, which is open to the front via the vent panel. Everything else is completely enclosed.
said by mityfowl :Could this be the thermostat is shot? Not likely, since there are two, one for the freezer and one for the fridge, and the manual says "the setting of one affects the temperature in the other to some extent", whatever that is supposed to mean!
Incidentally, the freezer seems fine, although I don't monitor the temp in there, just in the fridge. But everything is solidly frozen.
I suppose I should call the Maytag man and if it's something super expensive I'll just pay the service call and get a new fridge. It's just that I also need a new dishwasher and just put in a new A/C and a new roof. And instead of trees that grow money, I get rogue trees in unwanted places that have to be cut down and disposed of at great expense.  -- "Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace" -- Dr. Albert Schweitzer "A dog is like a child who never grows old ... always there to love and be loved" -- Aaron Katcher
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  mityfowl
join:2000-11-06 Dallas, TX
4 edits | I don't think there are 2 thermostats. I think there is 1 thermostat in the freezer and a "slider gateway or electronic gateway" to adjust the air flow from freezer to refrigerator. It looks like 2 adjustments but thats the electronic air flow.
Maybe you might want to dig everything out from the freezer and look at that air flow to the ref side. It might be the fan there.
Or maybe look at the inlet on the ref side. |
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 robbin Premium,MVM join:2000-09-21 Leander, TX
| reply to Wolfie00 said by Wolfie00 :I can pretty much guarantee what I would hear -- that it is coming from the bottom area around the compressor, which is open to the front via the vent panel. Everything else is completely enclosed. I don't doubt that -- but if you are right there when it makes the click you may be able to identify the component by sound. Basically what I am saying is that you are hearing a click -- so go for it and figure out the component making it. It is not necessarily the way the repairman would do it but you could save some $ if you do do it yourself and this is one way to identify the faulty component. |
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