Re: Refigerator Climate Type
Yes, You are right, these are climate class, you can find these details in EN 153 Standard. If you dont have then reply. I will send you the same.
Re: Refigerator Climate Type
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Futsal1st
I have seen climate type SN, N, ST and T in refrigerators. Can anyone give me a reference to find out what they are?
I believe that they relate to ambient operating conditions and understand (have been told) that they relate to SN = 25C; N = 32C; ST 38C and T 43C. Are these numbers correct?
Not exactly:
Quote:
Climate class of fridge freezers
Every fridge freezer has a 'climate class', which tells you the range of room temperatures with which it can cope. The two you're most likely to come across in the UK are N class and SN class. Both work effectively in room temperatures up to 32°C.
N models shouldn't be used in rooms that become colder than 16°C. SN models shouldn't be used at room temperatures below 10°C.
Other classes that you might come across are ST and T. ST models work best at between 18°C and 38°C, and T models between 18°C and 43°C.
http://www.which.co.uk/reviews/fridg...res-explained/
Re: Refigerator Climate Type
Quote:
Originally Posted by
amitsaxena
Yes, You are right, these are climate class, you can find these details in EN 153 Standard. If you dont have then reply. I will send you the same.
If you could that would be much appreciated. :D
nike123 thanks for that :)
The question relates to a caravan I just bought and am using in Australia. Sydney (where I live) HVAC design is 32CDB. Tropical North Queensland could be 40's. My fridge is an SN and stopped working (everything defrosted) when ambient went to low 30's. :(
Trying to work out if I have a case of wrong climate class against the manufacturer of the van to get fridge changed.
Re: Refigerator Climate Type
can you send me a copy as well??