Hi all. Weekend repair hobbyist here. I could really use some help troubleshooting a fridge that keeps tripping a GFI.
Here’s the background: Frigidare side-by-side, model: FRS24ZSF about 10 years old. Ice maker is off. The fridge is in the garage (beer and frozen pizza mostlyJ) and has worked off the GFI for the last year (I know “no GFI” but it was the closest plug for a convenient fridge location). One day found the freezer door was ever so slightly open. I’m not sure how long it was going, but it looked like it was forming a nice soft snow bank by the door crack. I closed the door and let the kids know (it just had to be them!) to be sure to keep it closed. Two days later I go out and the fridge had tripped the GFI. Luckily things were still frozen inside so it was all moved into the kitchen freezer quickly.
I started trouble shooting and thought the problem was the excess water I found in the freezer section that was causing a short. But after letting it dry for a couple of days it did not fix the problem.
After playing around with it for a little, I can turn the temperature switch to off, plug in the fridge and lights come on. Turn temperature switch to cool and most times the GFI pops. Sometimes (earlier in the testing) it would turn on and start to cool for a while, but would eventually pop the GFI. I thought at first the defrost cycle might be tripping it, but advancing the timer did NOT do the trick (it would still pop the GFI when the temperature dial is turned from off position). I did try plugging it into a separate 20amp circuit, and it would appear to run, although the fridge lights would dim noticeably when the compressor kicked in. Tried it on a second GFI circuit for kicks, but it still popped the GFI. Followed some instructions for testing the compressor leads, and they checked seemed to check out (2.6, 4.5, 7.0 ohms). Starter capacitor is not shorted as well.
I believe the relay switch is the culprit. It did not look to be in the best of condition. The casing on the relay seemed to be loose, but still integral enough when plugged in to work. It did have a faint smell of burned plastic when I held it up close. I’m guessing that this piece probably overheated when the freezer door was left open.
Before I start throwing down cash for a new relay, should I be checking/testing any other components? From what I’ve already researched it seems to point to this. Or could the relay a symptom of another problem?
Thank you
Here’s the background: Frigidare side-by-side, model: FRS24ZSF about 10 years old. Ice maker is off. The fridge is in the garage (beer and frozen pizza mostlyJ) and has worked off the GFI for the last year (I know “no GFI” but it was the closest plug for a convenient fridge location). One day found the freezer door was ever so slightly open. I’m not sure how long it was going, but it looked like it was forming a nice soft snow bank by the door crack. I closed the door and let the kids know (it just had to be them!) to be sure to keep it closed. Two days later I go out and the fridge had tripped the GFI. Luckily things were still frozen inside so it was all moved into the kitchen freezer quickly.
I started trouble shooting and thought the problem was the excess water I found in the freezer section that was causing a short. But after letting it dry for a couple of days it did not fix the problem.
After playing around with it for a little, I can turn the temperature switch to off, plug in the fridge and lights come on. Turn temperature switch to cool and most times the GFI pops. Sometimes (earlier in the testing) it would turn on and start to cool for a while, but would eventually pop the GFI. I thought at first the defrost cycle might be tripping it, but advancing the timer did NOT do the trick (it would still pop the GFI when the temperature dial is turned from off position). I did try plugging it into a separate 20amp circuit, and it would appear to run, although the fridge lights would dim noticeably when the compressor kicked in. Tried it on a second GFI circuit for kicks, but it still popped the GFI. Followed some instructions for testing the compressor leads, and they checked seemed to check out (2.6, 4.5, 7.0 ohms). Starter capacitor is not shorted as well.
I believe the relay switch is the culprit. It did not look to be in the best of condition. The casing on the relay seemed to be loose, but still integral enough when plugged in to work. It did have a faint smell of burned plastic when I held it up close. I’m guessing that this piece probably overheated when the freezer door was left open.
Before I start throwing down cash for a new relay, should I be checking/testing any other components? From what I’ve already researched it seems to point to this. Or could the relay a symptom of another problem?
Thank you
Comment