Guest
On Dec 15, 10:29 am, Phil Hobbs
<pcdhSpamMeSensel...@electrooptical.net> wrote:
which is what I meant to insinuate. If convection-cooled, there's
also the problem of convection cooling not performing as designed --
it won't "draw."
More to the point, besides having to bend to the floor to get your
stuff, a sideways-refrigerator's contents (and cold air load) dumps
onto the floor every time you open the door. And, the contents would
be ready to spill, since all the shelves would be sideways too. You'd
have to put it on its back, which has even more problems.
The chest freezer's compressor is oversized for ultra-insulated
refrigerator service, but I suspect less oversized and a better and
more efficient match than a standard refrigerator's compressor.
So, the converted chest freezer wins on all fronts.
OTOH, 4 inches of judiciously applied pink foam beats most of these
problems, and it's extra-ugly.
--
Cheers,
James Arthur
<pcdhSpamMeSensel...@electrooptical.net> wrote:
I think it's guaranteed not to work unless you rotate everything,On 12/15/2011 1:35 AM, dagmargoodb...@yahoo.com wrote:
On Dec 15, 12:35 am, linnix<m...@linnix.info-for.us> wrote:
On Dec 14, 8:52 pm, dagmargoodb...@yahoo.com wrote:
The US Department of Energy sponsored research into improving
refrigerator efficiency. Here are a couple of starter links:http://www.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/rev28_2/text/fri.htmhttp://www.or......
The main thing was increasing insulation from 1/2" to 2". Adaptive
defrost is mentioned too (in the 2nd link).
Yes, that's exactly what i am thinking about.
The ultimate in efficient refrigerators is a chest freezer, home-
converted into a fridge. http://mtbest.net/chest_fridge.html
Or a regular fridge turned sideway, with door pointing up.
The chest freezer works better--the insulation's thicker. I might do
one one day. Or not.
Turning an upright fridge sideways would be a lot more work--orienting
the coils, for one thing.
You could just strap some 4" foam
insulation board on a standard fridge--that's damn ugly, but it's
greenI think I just qualified for a green subsidy. Or a DOE
grant.
Refrigeration systems generally rely on gravity to avoid trying to
compress liquid, which is somewhat more difficult to do. Running one on
its side is not guaranteed to work.
which is what I meant to insinuate. If convection-cooled, there's
also the problem of convection cooling not performing as designed --
it won't "draw."
More to the point, besides having to bend to the floor to get your
stuff, a sideways-refrigerator's contents (and cold air load) dumps
onto the floor every time you open the door. And, the contents would
be ready to spill, since all the shelves would be sideways too. You'd
have to put it on its back, which has even more problems.
The chest freezer's compressor is oversized for ultra-insulated
refrigerator service, but I suspect less oversized and a better and
more efficient match than a standard refrigerator's compressor.
So, the converted chest freezer wins on all fronts.
OTOH, 4 inches of judiciously applied pink foam beats most of these
problems, and it's extra-ugly.
--
Cheers,
James Arthur