I’m well aware of the nightmare of replacing anything in evaporator area, including the heat exchanger, turns out it wasn’t the inverter board, it was a Freon leak, I added some Freon and the temp normalized.
@@SubZeroSpecialists that's going to be fun. They are about to find out why it's less expensive than a Subzero. It only costs a penny more to go first class.
These refrigerators use a variable speed compressor that can run at different speeds depending on the fridge's needs. This allows the compressor to run at full speed when the fridge is first turned on to quickly reach the desired temperature, and then run at a slower speed to maintain that temperature. This helps to save energy because the compressor isn't constantly running at full speed.
After working on Subzero the GE is a solid PITA!!! You have to be a contortionist to replace the evaporator fan or anything in that compartment.
I’m well aware of the nightmare of replacing anything in evaporator area, including the heat exchanger, turns out it wasn’t the inverter board, it was a Freon leak, I added some Freon and the temp normalized.
@@SubZeroSpecialists that's going to be fun. They are about to find out why it's less expensive than a Subzero. It only costs a penny more to go first class.
@@tonyturner9146 you get what you pay for
i thought inverter is either working or it's not. Ive never seen one fail because of not forcing fan to run fast enough. does that tend to happen?
These refrigerators use a variable speed compressor that can run at different speeds depending on the fridge's needs. This allows the compressor to run at full speed when the fridge is first turned on to quickly reach the desired temperature, and then run at a slower speed to maintain that temperature. This helps to save energy because the compressor isn't constantly running at full speed.
Pesky things them inverter boards lol