toria wrote:I asked the sales man what the average life was for a stove or refrig...seems like for any appliace I asked about he said ten to twelve years.
Pie-love wrote:We bought a new refrigerator recently-- a Frigidaire (actually two!). When we were at ABT scoping out refrigerators, we were looking at French door models with the freezer on the bottom. My husband suggested that for the price of a large-ish (21 or 22 sq. ft.) fridge, we could get TWO smaller (18 sq ft) basic models and keep one in the basement. This worked out brilliantly for us-- the smaller fridge makes our kitchen look larger, and the basement fridge serves as superb overflow space for extra milk, bread dough, forcing tulip bulbs, CSA produce, etc. I find I waste much less food because the upstairs fridge is much less crowded and I can find everything. Also, given the improvements in efficiency, the two smaller fridges run on about the same amount of power as our old fridge.
Jen
pairs4life wrote:The fridge is still acting odd, but I'm really thinking about this solution.
Anyone else have experience with the fridge/freezer solution?
seebee wrote:A fridge's job is to keep everything at about 38 degrees. Bells and whistles are bells and whistles, but a 7000 dollar Sub Zero cannot stay at 38 degrees better than a 300 dollar Kenmore. 38 degrees is 38 degrees.
Geo wrote:Machines differ in insulation values, air flow patterns, fan size, motor size, etc. It's not just a question of maintaining 38°F, it's questions like 'are all the zones properly maintained at temp?', 'how fast can the fridge recover from being stocked on shopping day?' , 'how much energy does it take to keep that temp annually?' and a bunch of others. Among these many questions, I think only the last one is standardly answered.
Our GE keeps things pretty well, but it runs a lot, it's noisy, and it takes it a while to return to correct temp after new stuff is added.
I don't know where you might get answers to these important questions, sorry.![]()
riddlemay wrote:seebee wrote:A fridge's job is to keep everything at about 38 degrees. Bells and whistles are bells and whistles, but a 7000 dollar Sub Zero cannot stay at 38 degrees better than a 300 dollar Kenmore. 38 degrees is 38 degrees.
This is what I've always believed--but is it really true? (Not whether 38 degrees is 38 degrees, but whether all refrigerators do an equally good job of keeping the temperature at a constant 38 degrees.) The question is not academic for me, as we are about to go refrigerator shopping. Jean Blanchard mentioned her Sub Zero did an incomparable job of keeping vegetables fresh. Is it because it does an incomparable job of maintaining the same ideal temperature? I have no desire to spend thousands extra for a tony name, but am interested in attributes that make a difference.