One of the handiest, and most frustrating, of RV appliances
has to be the refrigerator.
Just when you think everything is ready to go, you discover
the %#@*&! thing isn't cool.
First off, you have to remember the unit doesn't operate
like the refrigerator in your house. It's a gas-absorption
unit which operates on the principle that when certain
chemicals combine, heat is given off and when others combine,
heat is absorbed.
That's how the system works, the combination of the right
chemicals at the right time.
Most RV fridges work with distilled water, hydrogen and
ammonia. When ammonia is mixed with hydrogen, heat is
absorbed to provide cooling; when ammonia mixes with water,
heat is given off.
To do all this requires heat and that comes from a gas
flame or electric heat element.
The system has a generator and pump tube that works something
like a coffee perk. A solution of water and ammonia is
heated, boiling the ammonia out of the solution and carrying
the mixture up the pump tube.
The ammonia gas rises up into the refrigerator where
it mixes with the hydrogen gas, absorbing the heat and
cooling the refrigerator.
The ammonia-hydrogen then follows the circuit back out
of the refrigerator and down to meet the water, which
is flowing back to the generator.
That's what all those tubes are in the back of the unit.
Water likes ammonia more than hydrogen, so the ammonia
is absorbed, giving off heat, and the hydrogen released.
And the circuit starts all over again, giving off heat.
Simple. So what goes wrong?
Well, ventilation is one of the keys. Heat must be easily
given off so the solutions can flow freely and have enough
heat to boil the ammonia out of the solution to create
the pumping action.
Things to look for include a blocked or malfunctioning
gas burner or bad electric element.
Bad ventilation will cut down cooling in every mode,
so will a bad door gasket.
If cooling is non-existent, the cooling unit may have
failed or you may have simply parked too far off-level.
New units are less sensitive to level than older fridges,
but you still have to be reasonably close.
Before you cancel your trip, there are some things you
can check before you call the repair guy.
- First thing is to check that your unit is reasonably
level.
- Then, if you've been running on household current,
is the plug securely seated?
- If you've been running on propane, make sure you haven't
run out. Battery power on a three-way fridge is seldom
enough to provide initial cool-down, but should maintain
cooling.
- If that all checks out, make sure the refrigerator
isn't jammed with food to the point that interior air
circulation is hampered, then be sure nothing's fallen
in the ventilation area behind the fridge.
- Something you should have done when you put the unit
into operation earlier this year is check the door seals.
It's easy, just close the door on a sheet of writing
paper and pull on it. If it slides out easily, the seal's
too loose.