I have a used freezer from Sears built in the 50s. Bought from Craigslist because I suspect new owner just didn't want it and the previous owner died or moved. It stills run well today. Killed a relay with an 16 gauge extension cord , put a new one on, got heavy gauge extension cord, and it functions cold as ice. Could it last 100 years? I'd say it is possible, the build quality could be that good.^ ?? AFAIK, Samsung's been selling refrigerators in the US for over a dozen years and making them for closer to 50.
I suspect the primary problem is trying to make them more energy efficient with shorter defrost cycles and smaller drain openings, though I've had a few other brands over the years where eventually the gunk just builds up in the drain and then it's time to clean it.
I vaguely recall that there is some tablet product you can put in the pan to keep fungus from growing but I'm not sure if that would do anything about the drain tube itself.
Well, like their washing machines, in crowd of already cheap appliances, they cheap out more than others and thus fail in more annoying and possibly financially devastating ways. There's glass, and then there's cheap glass.^ Of course not, but it has little to do with brand. Appliances made today don't last as long due to addt'l electrics, power saving design, different refrigerant at higher pressure, using less metal, and labor rates high so unless you can DIY it is less cost effective to repair them.
I happen to have a 30+ y/o Kenmore freezer, door is now slightly rusting so I put wax on it to slow that down but otherwise works like a clock.
If there was a leak, would there be stuff like leaking under the fridge?^ My first guess would be that it's low on refrigerant from a leak and the compressor is cycling on (that's the noise) as it should but then shutting off because a pressure sensor is not sensing correct pressure, or possibly it's just the pressure sensor or the control board failed.
					
				Can you elaborate a little on this?What I would do is measure for voltage to the compressor when it should be running. If there is none then I'd measure for drive voltage on the relay coil contact on the connector (there are two contacts, one will be live and the other grounding) to be sure the fridge is trying to turn it on (relay need not be installed for this, testing at the connector is all that's needed with a multimeter in the range the relay uses, probably 12V or less).
	Can you elaborate a little on this?
This would be testing the relay itself?
I have it out right now. And when you say 12v like I could just use some AA batteries for this test right, taped end to end to get 12v or so?
I did something like this a while back with one of my arcade games but it was a different type of relay and it was one of those things in the moment I knew, but now I totally forget.
This is the relay.
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Well I guess it's actually called a "Relay Protector O/L" versus just a relay.
You could test the relay itself but what I was referring to was that the connector to the relay, would supply a coil drive voltage to energize the relay, and you'd measure whether the circuit is doing this. If the circuit isn't supplying the needed drive voltage to the relay coil then the relay itself might be good still and the problem occurring before it. EXCEPT see below, this is non-applicable info.
That is not a relay, it's a specialized thermal breaker (including current induced thermal break).
Klixon 4TM
I'm not familiar with this specific thermal breaker but yes it is possible that if it rattles, there is something like a bimetallic strip or disc inside that is flexing, then not returning fully to its normal closed circuit position when there isn't excessive current or temperature. It's also possible that it rattles with nothing wrong.
The way to test that would be ohms resistance between the two contacts but if it is just tripping way too early (too low a temp) that may not be apparent until it heats up some.
It is also possible that this thermal breaker is working correctly to cut the circuit power because the compressor is failing. If the compressor does not feel hot, you could measure current through ONE of the two wires to it with a clamp ammeter during the initial moments it's trying to run.
What I would do, since compressors are not self-healing (any damage is already done), is jumper together the two wires that went to that breaker and see if the fridge seems to work properly, being ready to pull the plug on the fridge if anything looks wrong. Naturally the more conservative approach would be don't mess with live mains power and just get a new breaker and see if that fixes it.
