A
Anonymous
Guest
Six months ago I fitted a thermostat from a Maplin Electronics kit to my fridge and the results, even through the hot Mediterranean summer, have been spectacular. Most 12V fridges are controlled by a mechanical thermostat in contact with the evaporator (cold plate). This works after a fashion but but it does not control well with changing loads (i.e. putting lots of warmish cans in), changing weather or frequent opening and closing of the fridge door. Either the fridge gets too cold, with frozen areas or parts get too warm. What is needed is a cabinet thermostat.
Maplin sell a kit type RR51F £4.99 www.maplin.co.uk You will need to search 'kit, thermostat' as I cannot find a way to get a link to post here. This kit is cheaper than buying the bits (unless you are a hobbyist and have it in stock) and it works, first time. It is easy to build as long as you can solder. The temperature sensor is a small thermistor. I wrapped a fair bit of self-amalgamating tape around mine to put a small delay in the response as well as to protect it from moisture and mechanical damage. The PCB is mounted outside the fridge and the thermistor connected by very thin electrical flex. I just close the fridge lid on the wire - I have not done anything clever like drilling a hole in the cabinet. But then in my installation the distance from the fridge lid to the electrical distribution cupboard is only a centimetre so the wire is not really noticeable. The output of the kit is a simple 'voltage-free' relay contact. I have simply wired this in series with the fridge supply, by the circuit breaker. The adjustment is on the kit PCB and is a potentiometer with a long control rod. You could mount this but for the moment I am still in the evaluation phase /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif and have tucked it quietly into a safe corner. I never need to adjust it regardless of the weather or what we are putting into the fridge so there is no need to have easy access to the control.
I decided to wait a while before recommending this and my verdict, on a chest-fridge (i.e. the cold air does not fall out when you open the lid) is that the improvement is 100%. We no longer accidentally get frozen food in the fridge when it is set cold enough to handle hot weather or heavy loads.
If anyone has any problems with this project, or tips that might help others, perhaps they could post them here.
Maplin sell a kit type RR51F £4.99 www.maplin.co.uk You will need to search 'kit, thermostat' as I cannot find a way to get a link to post here. This kit is cheaper than buying the bits (unless you are a hobbyist and have it in stock) and it works, first time. It is easy to build as long as you can solder. The temperature sensor is a small thermistor. I wrapped a fair bit of self-amalgamating tape around mine to put a small delay in the response as well as to protect it from moisture and mechanical damage. The PCB is mounted outside the fridge and the thermistor connected by very thin electrical flex. I just close the fridge lid on the wire - I have not done anything clever like drilling a hole in the cabinet. But then in my installation the distance from the fridge lid to the electrical distribution cupboard is only a centimetre so the wire is not really noticeable. The output of the kit is a simple 'voltage-free' relay contact. I have simply wired this in series with the fridge supply, by the circuit breaker. The adjustment is on the kit PCB and is a potentiometer with a long control rod. You could mount this but for the moment I am still in the evaluation phase /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif and have tucked it quietly into a safe corner. I never need to adjust it regardless of the weather or what we are putting into the fridge so there is no need to have easy access to the control.
I decided to wait a while before recommending this and my verdict, on a chest-fridge (i.e. the cold air does not fall out when you open the lid) is that the improvement is 100%. We no longer accidentally get frozen food in the fridge when it is set cold enough to handle hot weather or heavy loads.
If anyone has any problems with this project, or tips that might help others, perhaps they could post them here.