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How to Repair Refrigerator

A refrigerator is among the few appliances in your home that runs continuously, day or night, keeping your food chilly. If you consider how hard a refrigerator has to work, it is actually quite amazing they break down so infrequently. On the rare occasion your refrigerator does stop working, you may face a higher repair bill and the expense of replacing all your lost food. Have no fear! This article is here to tell you everything to consider about repairing your refrigerator and freezer yourself. You might be surprised to learn that repairs are in fact quite easy, requiring only a little knowledge about the appliance and a little patience. Let's get started doing some basic information.
Refrigerators and freezers consist of two basic components: a condenser coil as well as an evaporator coil. A liquid coolant is circulated through these coils by a compressor along with a motor. The refrigerant liquid is cooled in the condenser; it then flows to the evaporator. In the evaporator, the air in the unit is cooled by contact with the liquid-filled coil. The condenser of a refrigerator or freezer is the coil externally of the unit; the evaporator is the coil on the inside. The coolant is circulated with the system by a compressor.
Most refrigerators and freezers are frost-free. In this type of device, a heater is automatically turned on by a timer in order to melt the frost within the unit. Frost is melted by the heater at several different spots in the unit, you start with the coldest and most frosted areas. When the frost is completely melted, the thermostat automatically switches to a cooling cycle to be able to maintain the standard freezing temperature. Because this process is automatic, frost does not build up within the box.
The unit's compressor system, which forces the coolant through the coil system, is driven with a capacitor-type motor. Other basic parts of the cooling/defrosting system include switches, thermostats, heaters, condensers, as well as fans. A do-it-yourselfer can test and replace many of these refrigerator components.


Warning: Before doing any work on a refrigerator or freezer, make sure it's unplugged. After unplugging the device, check to see if the motor/compressor has a capacitor; this component is located in a housing with top of the motor. Capacitors store electricity, even when the power to the unit is switched off. Before you do any work on a capacitor-type refrigerator or freezer, you must discharge your capacitor, or you could receive a severe shock.

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