-SaltCreep
Member
- Joined
- May 6, 2024
- Messages
- 13
Hey all,
I was never told you shouldn't tip a fridge on its back. Recent I was given a Marvel 61wc wine fridge and thought it would be a perfect beer fridge out in the garage. I quickly learned that even at its max, being a wine fridge, it would only cool down to ~41F. So I started to explore options and found that the thermostat, located on the bottom front of the unit, had two little set screws that could be adjusted to change the on/off points. I set to tipping the unit back so I could access the thermostat an make small adjustment to the screws and monitor the temps over several hours. After about a half dozen times doing this I eventually over shot just a bit and the fridge was sitting at 32F, so one more small adjustment and I should be perfect. As I tip the fridge back I hear a POP and some smoke comes out of the bottom rear.... and dawns on me I am an idiot.
The fridge stops running and the lights no longer work. Since then, I have learned just about everything about how refrigerators work and how to fix them but a few things still elude me. One of which is, if I damaged the compressor while tipping it back, would that cause the lights to also not function?
Here is what I have been able to test using multimeter:
Capacitor = 10.2 uf
PTC (3 pin) 4.6 Ohms on pins 5 & 6, testing from pin 7 has no continuity, no rattle. (more on this later)
Compressor: start + run = 10.4 Ohms, start + common = 6.2 Ohms, run + common = 4.2 Ohms. No shorts where detected any compressor pins.
The PTC I am a bit unsure about. I am not sure if I should have any continuity to pin 7 or not, and I can not find this particular model or any PTC with a similar ping layout anywhere online. The model I have here is PTHAS-T4R7M180 or PTH490N-AS4R7 but the only documentation I can find online for the compressor shows a slightly differnt model number, but either way I can not find either of them
https://archive.org/details/Panasonic_SD43C90JAU6_Air_Compressor_User_Manual/mode/2up



Thanks in advance for any advise you can give.
I was never told you shouldn't tip a fridge on its back. Recent I was given a Marvel 61wc wine fridge and thought it would be a perfect beer fridge out in the garage. I quickly learned that even at its max, being a wine fridge, it would only cool down to ~41F. So I started to explore options and found that the thermostat, located on the bottom front of the unit, had two little set screws that could be adjusted to change the on/off points. I set to tipping the unit back so I could access the thermostat an make small adjustment to the screws and monitor the temps over several hours. After about a half dozen times doing this I eventually over shot just a bit and the fridge was sitting at 32F, so one more small adjustment and I should be perfect. As I tip the fridge back I hear a POP and some smoke comes out of the bottom rear.... and dawns on me I am an idiot.
The fridge stops running and the lights no longer work. Since then, I have learned just about everything about how refrigerators work and how to fix them but a few things still elude me. One of which is, if I damaged the compressor while tipping it back, would that cause the lights to also not function?
Here is what I have been able to test using multimeter:
Capacitor = 10.2 uf
PTC (3 pin) 4.6 Ohms on pins 5 & 6, testing from pin 7 has no continuity, no rattle. (more on this later)
Compressor: start + run = 10.4 Ohms, start + common = 6.2 Ohms, run + common = 4.2 Ohms. No shorts where detected any compressor pins.
The PTC I am a bit unsure about. I am not sure if I should have any continuity to pin 7 or not, and I can not find this particular model or any PTC with a similar ping layout anywhere online. The model I have here is PTHAS-T4R7M180 or PTH490N-AS4R7 but the only documentation I can find online for the compressor shows a slightly differnt model number, but either way I can not find either of them
https://archive.org/details/Panasonic_SD43C90JAU6_Air_Compressor_User_Manual/mode/2up



Thanks in advance for any advise you can give.













