Cigar Asylum Cigar Forum  

Go Back   Cigar Asylum Cigar Forum > Cigar Forums > Accessory Discussion / Reviews

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 07-15-2009, 07:32 AM   #1
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Maybe....but if it comes out "cool", I want to show it off!
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-15-2009, 11:03 AM   #2
shilala
Dear Lord, Thank You.
 
shilala's Avatar
6
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Scott
Posts: 13,721
Trading: (252)
Cuaba
shilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond repute
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by BigAsh View Post
So, the condenser issue may not be that big a deal ....wait, let me adjust my rose-colored glasses.....anyway, I'll take a bunch of pics of the freezer unit and post 'em up soon
It doesn't matter if the compressor only pushes for a few minutes, condensation will occur. It's just the way she goes.
Whether it's going to be a problem is a whole nother story.
Anything can be fixed.
A buddy of mine at work used to always say "it's impossible".
I'd answer him with "That's why we're here. You wanna go sit in the truck?"
Get them pics.
__________________
shilala is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-15-2009, 11:41 AM   #3
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

alrighty then.....I see what I'm doing tonite...... pics shortly!
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-16-2009, 10:03 PM   #4
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Pics of the first coat of paint....a nice subtle RED....



__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-15-2009, 07:30 AM   #5
avid toker
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Best of luck with the project. I used a similar fridge for a humi. Truth be told, my basement stayed a constant 65-70 degrees so I never plugged it in. A few strategically placed beads and a few fans and all was good. It stayed in the high 60s to low 70s all year round. Every year or so, I'd simply rotate the top shelf boxes to the bottom, etc.

Since it does insulate very well, be on the look out for mold if your RH% creeps up. Good luck!
  Reply With Quote
Old 07-17-2009, 08:22 AM   #6
shilala
Dear Lord, Thank You.
 
shilala's Avatar
6
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Scott
Posts: 13,721
Trading: (252)
Cuaba
shilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond reputeshilala has a reputation beyond repute
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

K, Keith.
See those coils? That's what will get cold. Then they are glued, soldered, and clamped to the freezer body. It's most likely aluminum, because aluminum is almost as good as copper at transferring heat.
What you could do is tear off the freezer door, insulate the inside of the freezer with foam (like 1 inch blue stuff), seal that foam around the seams with silicone, then you could store stuff in the freezer section.
That'll keep and condenstaion from touching your stuff, but creates a very high liklihood of mold growing behind the foam.
If you can build a form inside the freezer out of wood, space it from the walls, and blow it full of canned foam, that'd be ultra-awesome. No mold, because there'd be no place for it to grow.

You could also simply build shelves in the freezer, and add a computer fan in there.
You'd have to be VERY careful that nothing (boxes, etc.) ever touches the sides, and be sure that there's plenty of sirculation for the fan to dry the condensation and return it to the air.

Now, the drip pan....
You somehow have to return any drip water to the air. Fans would do it. They make little 60 mm computer fans that'd work. They even have 40 mm fans that would work and be smaller.

It all depends where you put it. If it's in a warm area and it's gonna run a lot, there's going to be lots of condensate (water). If it's in a cool area, it'll run very little and need far less air movement to dry the condensed water and return it to your beads.

Yes, you can remove the freezer if you don't want any cooling. The coils that are on the freezer are where heat transfer happens. Inside those coils reside refrigerant.
To remove the coils from the freezer walls, bundle them, and use them as a chiller would work, but aluminum is VERY fragile. The odds of doing that without blowing a hole are about one in a million.

The best way to approach it is to finish it up, make your shelves or whatever, put beads in it, run it and see what happens.
Then you can make the necessary mods to make it work the way you want it to.
that's what I do.

The inherent design and particular formation of the freezer body and how it works is what's screwing you over. It's designed to condense and drip on the inside and outside of the freezer body so it keeps water off your food.
The ice that forms on/in the freezer is what cools the food below.
There's a thermostat below in the food section that drives the freezer unit to cool, thus ensuring the cycle.
The freezer section is the evaporator.
The coils on the back of your fridge are the condenser.
The compressor is underneath your fridge near the back.
Don't get "water condensing on the evaporator" confused with the condenser on the back of your fridge. It'll just make you more confused.
The reason they call the thing inside your fridge an evaporator (your freezer) is because that's where liquid refrigerant evaporates (inside those tubes) and gathers heat. It then carries the heat back to the compressor, is compressed and multiplied, then the heat is released in the condenser coil where it turns back to a liquid, and heads back to your freezer through an orifice where it "flashes" back to a saturated vapor and starts gathering heat again.
That's the confusing part, kinda. We think the freezer is "making cold", but it's actually carrying away heat.

So you either keep the freezer, or don't have any cooling.
Add some fans and see what happens.
The pains in the ass may be minimal, and might be easy to fix. Ultimately you might even be able to use the freezer section.
If nothing else, you could always use jar humis (beware, puff link) in the freezer section.
__________________
shilala is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-17-2009, 01:04 PM   #7
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by shilala View Post
K, Keith.
See those coils? That's what will get cold. Then they are glued, soldered, and clamped to the freezer body. It's most likely aluminum, because aluminum is almost as good as copper at transferring heat.
What you could do is tear off the freezer door, insulate the inside of the freezer with foam (like 1 inch blue stuff), seal that foam around the seams with silicone, then you could store stuff in the freezer section.
That'll keep and condenstaion from touching your stuff, but creates a very high liklihood of mold growing behind the foam.
If you can build a form inside the freezer out of wood, space it from the walls, and blow it full of canned foam, that'd be ultra-awesome. No mold, because there'd be no place for it to grow.

You could also simply build shelves in the freezer, and add a computer fan in there.
You'd have to be VERY careful that nothing (boxes, etc.) ever touches the sides, and be sure that there's plenty of sirculation for the fan to dry the condensation and return it to the air.

Now, the drip pan....
You somehow have to return any drip water to the air. Fans would do it. They make little 60 mm computer fans that'd work. They even have 40 mm fans that would work and be smaller.

It all depends where you put it. If it's in a warm area and it's gonna run a lot, there's going to be lots of condensate (water). If it's in a cool area, it'll run very little and need far less air movement to dry the condensed water and return it to your beads.

Yes, you can remove the freezer if you don't want any cooling. The coils that are on the freezer are where heat transfer happens. Inside those coils reside refrigerant.
To remove the coils from the freezer walls, bundle them, and use them as a chiller would work, but aluminum is VERY fragile. The odds of doing that without blowing a hole are about one in a million.

The best way to approach it is to finish it up, make your shelves or whatever, put beads in it, run it and see what happens.
Then you can make the necessary mods to make it work the way you want it to.
that's what I do.

The inherent design and particular formation of the freezer body and how it works is what's screwing you over. It's designed to condense and drip on the inside and outside of the freezer body so it keeps water off your food.
The ice that forms on/in the freezer is what cools the food below.
There's a thermostat below in the food section that drives the freezer unit to cool, thus ensuring the cycle.
The freezer section is the evaporator.
The coils on the back of your fridge are the condenser.
The compressor is underneath your fridge near the back.
Don't get "water condensing on the evaporator" confused with the condenser on the back of your fridge. It'll just make you more confused.
The reason they call the thing inside your fridge an evaporator (your freezer) is because that's where liquid refrigerant evaporates (inside those tubes) and gathers heat. It then carries the heat back to the compressor, is compressed and multiplied, then the heat is released in the condenser coil where it turns back to a liquid, and heads back to your freezer through an orifice where it "flashes" back to a saturated vapor and starts gathering heat again.
That's the confusing part, kinda. We think the freezer is "making cold", but it's actually carrying away heat.

So you either keep the freezer, or don't have any cooling.
Add some fans and see what happens.
The pains in the ass may be minimal, and might be easy to fix. Ultimately you might even be able to use the freezer section.
If nothing else, you could always use jar humis (beware, puff link) in the freezer section.
Thanks Scott...you are a wealth of knowledge and a fine BOTL!....I'm gonna try it and see what happens....I'm optimistic all will work out well in the end.....Next will be firming up with Chuck on shelves/drawers.....
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-03-2010, 10:15 PM   #8
bsmokin
Slippin... Fast.
 
bsmokin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
First Name: Bryan
Location: South Jersey
Posts: 616
Trading: (15)
RA
bsmokin is on a distinguished road
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by shilala View Post
K, Keith.
See those coils? That's what will get cold. Then they are glued, soldered, and clamped to the freezer body. It's most likely aluminum, because aluminum is almost as good as copper at transferring heat.
What you could do is tear off the freezer door, insulate the inside of the freezer with foam (like 1 inch blue stuff), seal that foam around the seams with silicone, then you could store stuff in the freezer section.
That'll keep and condenstaion from touching your stuff, but creates a very high liklihood of mold growing behind the foam.
If you can build a form inside the freezer out of wood, space it from the walls, and blow it full of canned foam, that'd be ultra-awesome. No mold, because there'd be no place for it to grow.

You could also simply build shelves in the freezer, and add a computer fan in there.
You'd have to be VERY careful that nothing (boxes, etc.) ever touches the sides, and be sure that there's plenty of sirculation for the fan to dry the condensation and return it to the air.

Now, the drip pan....
You somehow have to return any drip water to the air. Fans would do it. They make little 60 mm computer fans that'd work. They even have 40 mm fans that would work and be smaller.

It all depends where you put it. If it's in a warm area and it's gonna run a lot, there's going to be lots of condensate (water). If it's in a cool area, it'll run very little and need far less air movement to dry the condensed water and return it to your beads.

Yes, you can remove the freezer if you don't want any cooling. The coils that are on the freezer are where heat transfer happens. Inside those coils reside refrigerant.
To remove the coils from the freezer walls, bundle them, and use them as a chiller would work, but aluminum is VERY fragile. The odds of doing that without blowing a hole are about one in a million.

The best way to approach it is to finish it up, make your shelves or whatever, put beads in it, run it and see what happens.
Then you can make the necessary mods to make it work the way you want it to.
that's what I do.

The inherent design and particular formation of the freezer body and how it works is what's screwing you over. It's designed to condense and drip on the inside and outside of the freezer body so it keeps water off your food.
The ice that forms on/in the freezer is what cools the food below.
There's a thermostat below in the food section that drives the freezer unit to cool, thus ensuring the cycle.
The freezer section is the evaporator.
The coils on the back of your fridge are the condenser.
The compressor is underneath your fridge near the back.
Don't get "water condensing on the evaporator" confused with the condenser on the back of your fridge. It'll just make you more confused.
The reason they call the thing inside your fridge an evaporator (your freezer) is because that's where liquid refrigerant evaporates (inside those tubes) and gathers heat. It then carries the heat back to the compressor, is compressed and multiplied, then the heat is released in the condenser coil where it turns back to a liquid, and heads back to your freezer through an orifice where it "flashes" back to a saturated vapor and starts gathering heat again.
That's the confusing part, kinda. We think the freezer is "making cold", but it's actually carrying away heat.

So you either keep the freezer, or don't have any cooling.
Add some fans and see what happens.
The pains in the ass may be minimal, and might be easy to fix. Ultimately you might even be able to use the freezer section.
If nothing else, you could always use jar humis (beware, puff link) in the freezer section.
WOW shilala... you know your stuff, eh?!
bsmokin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2010, 02:21 AM   #9
Savor the Stick
~Loves the Lord~
 
Savor the Stick's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Kevin, or just K
Location: Wichita Falls, Texas
Posts: 1,945
Trading: (67)
Partagas Navy (Served With Honor)
Savor the Stick has disabled reputation
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by bjones View Post
WOW shilala... you know your stuff, eh?!
That's what the man does (used to) for a living.

Scott's da Man!

Thanks for bumping this back up Jonesie!
__________________
Pastor K Please Support the Troops
Savor the Stick is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-25-2010, 07:51 PM   #10
kgoings
Cigarologist
 
kgoings's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Kirk
Location: Highlands Ranch, Co
Posts: 1,979
Trading: (42)
HUpmann Army (Served With Honor)
kgoings is a jewel in the roughkgoings is a jewel in the roughkgoings is a jewel in the rough
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Did you finish this??
__________________
Your silly little opinion has been noted!
kgoings is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-25-2010, 08:07 PM   #11
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

everything but the shelves!.....Chuck made some killer trays (his work is awesome) but my measurements were off a bit so we're still working thru it....its painted and storing boxes and five finger bags right now ......holding steady with 2 lbs of beads.... hoping to finish it completely soon!
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-25-2010, 08:08 PM   #12
kgoings
Cigarologist
 
kgoings's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Kirk
Location: Highlands Ranch, Co
Posts: 1,979
Trading: (42)
HUpmann Army (Served With Honor)
kgoings is a jewel in the roughkgoings is a jewel in the roughkgoings is a jewel in the rough
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by BigAsh View Post
everything but the shelves!.....Chuck made some killer trays (his work is awesome) but my measurements were off a bit so we're still working thru it....its painted and storing boxes and five finger bags right now ......holding steady with 2 lbs of beads.... hoping to finish it completely soon!
anymore pics?
__________________
Your silly little opinion has been noted!
kgoings is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-26-2010, 05:16 PM   #13
paris1129
Adjusting to the Life
 
paris1129's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
First Name: Matthew
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 296
Trading: (4)
paris1129 is on a distinguished road
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

We want new pics!
__________________

By the time a man realizes that maybe his father was right, he usually has a son who thinks he's wrong.
paris1129 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-26-2010, 05:22 PM   #14
AD720
I'm nuts for the place
 
AD720's Avatar
1
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Andrew
Location: The City of BOTL-erly Love
Posts: 2,684
Trading: (73)
Partagas
AD720 is a jewel in the roughAD720 is a jewel in the roughAD720 is a jewel in the rough
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)




__________________
AD720 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-26-2010, 05:26 PM   #15
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

hahahaha...........no pressure or anything!......I'll work on it!....Once Chuck and I figure out a fix, look out!
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-26-2010, 06:47 PM   #16
ChasDen
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

I'm pretty sure I have the "fix" in my head, just need to put it to paper and move out 100 trays that are scattered all over the place right now .

Chas
  Reply With Quote
Old 01-26-2010, 07:29 PM   #17
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by ChasDen View Post
I'm pretty sure I have the "fix" in my head, just need to put it to paper and move out 100 trays that are scattered all over the place right now .

Chas
.....I know it'll be worth the wait!
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2010, 10:42 AM   #18
mukky
NOOB
 
mukky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
First Name: Kevin
Location: Warren, MI
Posts: 78
Trading: (2)
Partagas
mukky is on a distinguished road
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

so are we ever gonna see some pics?
mukky is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-08-2010, 06:56 PM   #19
Jack1000
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

Quote:
Originally Posted by mukky View Post
so are we ever gonna see some pics?
+1--that red looked cool.
  Reply With Quote
Old 07-09-2010, 08:53 AM   #20
BigAsh
Don't knock the Ash...
 
BigAsh's Avatar
7
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Keith
Location: Yardley, PA
Posts: 5,057
Trading: (46)
Partagas
BigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to beholdBigAsh is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Fridge "reclamation" project (pic heavy)

I'm on vacation this week but I should have a box from Chasden/Chuck waiting for me when I get back... Also have some touchups to do on the door...."Partagas Red", that's the color.... Hoping to post finished project pics real soon
__________________
Keith
BigAsh is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:29 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content is copyrighted jointly by Cigar Asylum and the content provider.