Paging for a refrigeration engineer. We have a 5 year old Gaggenau fridge freezer. Mrs CFXII wanted this one in a new kitchen, and at the time it cost more than many cars I've owned. Last year the fan in the fridge started making a duff bearing noise. I bought a fan, then found the evaporator coils jammed solid with ice which had grown down into the fan. The noise was as the ice started to grow and foul the fan impeller. Once that was thawed, the thing was fine for a few weeks until the ice grew again.. rinse repeat etc... Clearly the auto defrost not working.
The fan was fine. There are two auto defrost elements, they both had continuity, as did a thermal fuse and a thermistor, which varied resistance with heat. Regrettably I had to admit defeat & call the service firm. They sent round an idiot engineer who insisted on changing the fan, unfortunately I wasn't at home during the visit. He put the thing back together and trapped wire with a screw that then kept tripping the RCD. He had several more visits changing boards etc... all to no avail.
A second engineer has now been round and spoke to 'Technical' who have said it must have low gas and he is coming back this week to re-gas. I suppose it could be this, but doubt his explanation. I'm beginning to think they share engineering principles with VW Commercial....
Is there any refrigeration engineers on here that could explain why/if low gas could cause this? I can't think of any other reason for this very annoying issue. The unit has two compressors, one each for fridge & freezer. The freezer and ice maker work faultlessly.
The fan was fine. There are two auto defrost elements, they both had continuity, as did a thermal fuse and a thermistor, which varied resistance with heat. Regrettably I had to admit defeat & call the service firm. They sent round an idiot engineer who insisted on changing the fan, unfortunately I wasn't at home during the visit. He put the thing back together and trapped wire with a screw that then kept tripping the RCD. He had several more visits changing boards etc... all to no avail.
A second engineer has now been round and spoke to 'Technical' who have said it must have low gas and he is coming back this week to re-gas. I suppose it could be this, but doubt his explanation. I'm beginning to think they share engineering principles with VW Commercial....
Is there any refrigeration engineers on here that could explain why/if low gas could cause this? I can't think of any other reason for this very annoying issue. The unit has two compressors, one each for fridge & freezer. The freezer and ice maker work faultlessly.