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Thread: Walk-in freezer Fans wtf.

  1. #21
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    [QUOTE=jpsmith1cm;14249761]Simple test.

    BEFORE you touch the timer wheel, take a sharpie and mark the inner wheel of the timer inline with the time arrow.

    Wait 5 minutes.

    This is the first thing I do now as well.... That 5 minutes feels like 30 waiting to see if it moves.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dchappa21 View Post
    This is the first thing I do now as well.... That 5 minutes feels like 30 waiting to see if it moves.
    not if you then take a few minutes, close off the king valve and pump the unit down to start to defrost it....
    Last edited by jpsmith1cm; 09-23-2012 at 10:51 AM. Reason: fixed quote



  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by jpsmith1cm View Post
    not if you then take a few minutes, close off the king valve and pump the unit down to start to defrost it....
    Lol, I do this too but it still seems like time goes extra slow waiting around for the clock to move or not move...

  4. #24
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    I agree with cj walker....check the defrost initiate/terminate stat..

  5. #25
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    I concur w/cjpwalker. Sounds like a bad defrost ini/ter. control. grabbit an growl!

  6. #26
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    oops, takin this new drug called DAMMITOL!

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by cjpwalker View Post

    Skipping defrost coupled with strange fan behavior sounds more like a defrost terminator/fan delay switch problem to me. The epoxy seal on those breaks down over time and they fill with water.
    Yea I've witnessed very odd voltages when water gets in switches. You will get like 98 volts or 66 or somewhere inbetween , and the fan runs slow

    and like said above .... the case might just shock the hell outta you

  8. #28
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    Yup, any time I see an iced evaporator, first thing I do is mark the clock. Then continue with preliminary inspection and gathering model/serial info.

    I've definitely seen dtfd's cause the defrost timer issue as previously described. It terminates the instant it starts, so to speak.

    But, for what it's worth, I've seen fan behavior just like this which was caused by residual ice in the core of the evaporator, which blocked air flow through the coil and so the only other place for the air to travel through was through the "weaker" fan, fighting against it. (Note that weaker doesn't necessarily mean a defective fan, but in this scenario, one of them will dominate the other.) Pull the blade assembly off of the slower fan and see if the motor comes up to speed. And get a -bright- lite and make sure that coil is clear all the way through.

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