by www.rvrefrigerator.net
The three most common signs that indicate a bad cooling unit are:
• A strong ammonia smell inside the box, this would indicate a leak in the evaporator section. Look at our link rebuilding process for a more detailed understanding of how we repair a cooling unit with an evaporator leak. If the unit has leaked for an extended amount of time the ammonia smell may no longer be present but you will probably hear a gurgling sound coming from the back of your refrigerator a few minutes after you turn it on.
• If the controls are working and the cooling unit is heating up in the back but there is no cooling taking place inside the box this could be a sign of a blockage in the boiler section.
• Another thing to look for, if your unit is not cooling but you don’t smell ammonia inside the box, look for a yellow powder around or just above the burner located at the back of the unit. This would indicate a leak in the boiler section. Since this leak is outside the box you would rarely smell it inside. I see these boiler leaks more frequently in the newer Norcold and Dometic cooling units.
The three examples above should help you identify your cooling unit problem. If you feel you have a different problem with your refrigerator or need further advice on troubleshooting your problem, call me at the above number or read below for a better explanation of what an ammonia absorption cooling unit requires to operate properly.
What a Cooling Unit Needs to Operate Properly
The cooling unit, or coils, of an ammonia absorption refrigerator, is the heart of the refrigerator–it does the actual cooling. Everything else on the refrigerator either supports the cooling unit or is an accessory. No matter how simple or complicated the controls of the refrigerator are, all cooling units require the same three things to operate:
• The unit has to be level
• The unit has to have adequate ventilation
• The unit has to have the CORRECT heat
• A fourth issue is raised if the cooling unit has recently been changed. The cooling unit has to have been properly installed into the refrigerator.
If the three above requirements are provided to the cooling unit, it should work and should work well. If it doesn’t work well, then it is a bad cooling unit. It’s really that simple. (Also, failure to meet the three requirements above when the refrigerator is in operation can cause permanent damage to the cooling unit.) Of course, don’t overlook mitigating circumstances such as the main door that seals very poorly, which would cause a good cooling unit to look bad because of warm air continuously entering the box.
Also, if the cooling unit seems to work poorly only during warm weather, it’s possible that one of the requirements above is in a borderline state. In other words, the venting, for example, maybe adequate for mild weather, but not adequate for warm weather. A cooling unit could also be borderline, but it would be prudent to look elsewhere first.
Testing the Cooling Unit
First of all, if the cooling unit cools properly on one heat source (i.e. gas or electric) and not the other, then the cooling unit, with only a few exceptions, is good and the problem lies in the heat source that is not functioning properly.
Secondly, there are obvious signs of a bad cooling unit.
• If you smell ammonia in or around the refrigerator, and you haven’t recently used ammonia for cleaning, the cooling unit is bad. No further testing is necessary.
• If sodium chromate is present on the outside of the cooling unit, the cooling unit is bad. Sodium chromate is a yellowish-greenish powder in solution inside the cooling unit. If sodium chromate is outside the cooling unit, the cooling unit has a hole in it.
• If you hear a relatively loud gurgling or percolating sound when the refrigerator is in operation (being heated), it is a sign of a bad cooling unit. The keywords here are “relatively loud”. A good cooling unit percolates when in operation, and if you get close enough and listen carefully enough, you can hear it percolate. However, if you hear the noise a few feet away, it is a sign that the cooling unit has lost pressure and is bad.
Testing the cooling unit is simply ensuring that the three necessary requirements for the operation of a cooling unit (level, ventilation, correct heat) are met. Do whatever it takes to meet these requirements. If you suspect a venting problem, pull the refrigerator and set it on the floor. In fact, pulling the refrigerator and setting it on a level floor meets two of the requirements and leaves only one, correct heat, to worry about. Always test the refrigerator on the electric heat source, unless you are unable to because you have a gas-only refrigerator. The reason for testing on the electric side is if the electric heat element gets hot, you can be better than 95% sure that you have correct heat, whereas even a poor gas flame will produce heat. To ensure that the heating element is getting hot, you can touch the insulation pack (a rectangular or round sheet metal container filled with insulation located directly above the propane burner) to see if it is warm after about a half-hour of operation.
CAUTION: touch the pack lightly at first; it is possible under certain conditions for the pack to get super hot and burn you. If the insulation pack does not get warm, you have an electrical problem that needs to be corrected before continuing. If an electrical problem is not the electric heat element itself and/or you want to ensure that some other electrical component (such as a thermostat) is not interrupting the heating element, you can hotwire the heating element for better testing conditions.
The only weak link in this testing procedure is less than 5% of the time that a working heat element is not producing the correct heat. See hot wiring for information on verifying the output of the heating element.
After you have provided the cooling unit with its three requirements, allow plenty of time for the cooling unit to function. You should see signs of cooling in the freezer after about two hours. Allow six to eight hours, or even overnight, for an empty refrigerator to come down to temperature. The ammonia absorption style of refrigeration is slower than the compressor-style in terms of initially bringing the refrigerator down to temperature. However, once the desired temperature is reached, there should be no problem in maintaining that temperature.
If you have done everything in this section up to this point and the cooling unit does not work or does not work well, the cooling unit is bad and will need to be rebuilt or replaced.