Fixed my Adlor-Barbour Refrigerator.
"Bruce" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 20 Dec 2012 09:28:34 -0500, Gogarty
wrote:
In article ,
says...
On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 22:21:44 -0500, Marc Auslander
wrote:
Bruce writes:
On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 15:41:55 -0500, " Sir Gregory Hall, Esq·"
åke wrote:
...
At any rate, since I crimped the connectors tighter it hasn't missed a
beat.
I am just soooo freaking smart!!! Perhaps this might assist somebody
else
who
has been experiencing the same or similar symptoms.
Loose connections? And you are a genius to have fixed them?
Aren't you the guy who is described as having a few loose screws?
--
Cheers,
Bruce
In the computer and auto electrical repair worlds, I live by the truth
that "it's always the connector!" I see it works on boats as well :-)
Years ago, in the Apple II days, I used to "fix" computers by pulling
the cards out and pressing them back in a couple of times. Sort of
scratched the corrosion off I guess. A really serious defect was
sometimes cured by rubbing a rubber eraser across the contacts.
--
Cheers,
Bruce
Back in the days of my TRS-80 computer, when it started getting flaky, pull
all the cables and wipe the male connectors with a red rubber pencil erases.
Worked great.
As for the fridge, did you evacuate all the cooland and recharge? You could
have water vapor in there.
That was someone else fixing the fridge.
But your question brings up something... The American refrigeration
people I've worked with all insisted on long periods of vacuuming
systems. the Thai's on the other hand hook the pump up, pause to light
a cigarette, and then charge it with refrigerant.
But I've never had a Thai serviced system freeze up :-)
Americans tend to believe the old adage that if a little is
good, a lot is better and too much is just right.
Respecting drawing a vacuum in a refrigeration system,
it can't possibly matter how long the vacuum is in place.
One minute is as good as one hour. In a vacuum one
draws out molecules. As many water molecules will be
drawn out in a vacuum held for one minute as for one hour.
American's also believe in ripping off the customer. If a
service technician can charge you and extra hour labor
while he sits and twiddles his thumbs or smokes cigarettes
he will do so.
--
Sir Gregory
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