Gas Refrigerators

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Does anyone still have one? Has anyone ever seen one?

I know by the old RCA Whirlpool ads that they did exist, but what happened to them, why did they stop making them? If gas is still the cheapest power source why aren't they still being produced today? On another note my neighbor said she had gas central a/c by Arla-Servel? (not sure of spelling, that's what it sounded like).

??
 
I have seen propane refrigerators in use in houses in remote locations where there is no utility company power and my late grandmother in the UK had an Electrolux gas fridge in the late 60's/early 70's. Haven't heard of the 'major' manufacturers still building them though.

Servel also made gas refrigerators in the late 40's and early 50's - I saw an ad on eBay for them and it boasted that the fridge had an automatic icemaker! How cool is that??
 
Nothing happened to them -- they're still made.

They're great for cabins and campers, where electricity might not be available or reliable.

They're not popular because people like all of the features that electricity can provide (you'd have to plug it in for automatic ice, cabinet lights, etc), and because they don't produce a lot of cold quickly. If you leave the door open for a long time, or if you fill it with warm food, you'll be waiting quite a while for everything to cool down again.

On the other hand, they're silent and virtually trouble-free.

-kevin

 
The government doesn't want you to have them, because of the possibility of carbon monoxide poisoning, from units not serviced regularly.
There was even a program many years ago, where you could scrap an older gas refrigerator, and receive $100.00

kennyGF
 
Aunt had one

My Aunt had a 1960's RCA-Whirlpool gas refrigerator with ice maker. Avocado green. Upside-down T-SHAPED door handle. Worked forever until she sold the house. Looked very modern, you'd never guess it was gas. She lived in Chicago. I understand most gas refrigerators were sold where electricity was absent or prone to failure.
 
my memories are quite foggy, but in the mid 60s, my family spent time at a residential hotel by the shore. the hotel had a community kitchen, filled with stoves & refridgerators, many which were gas. this was highly perplexing to me. i couldn't imagine how a lit pilot light could make anything "cold". unfortunately, i can't recall the brands i saw, but servel does sound familiar.
 
Absorption Refrigeration

A gas powered refrigerator uses the heat of the gas pilot to drive the cooling process by creating liquid ammonia in a hydrogen environment. Just as your sweat helps cool you by evaporating on a hot day, the ammonia cools by evaporating.

The process is a little complex, but the link below seems to explain it well. In a nutshell:

Liquid ammonia is in an evaporator tube with hydrogen gas. The hydrogen helps create a condition by which the ammonia boils off into a vapor (evaporates), cooling the tube in the process. The resulting ammonia gas - hydrogen gas mixture then enters a tube (absorber) with dripping water. The ammonia is absorbed into the water, while the hydrogen is not absorbed. The water with the ammonia absorbed into it flows to the bottom of the coil system. There, an external heat sources (like a gas flame) boils the water-ammonia mixture so that only the ammonia bubbles out (generator). The bubbles contain water, so the tubes have intricacies that cause the bubbles to burst (separator). The water is separated and enters the previously mentioned "dripping" part of the cycle, while the ammonia gas - which now has no hydrogen - goes into an external set of tubes (heat exchanger) that use room air to cool the hot ammonia gas so that it liquifies (condenser). It then enters the evaporator again, where hydrogen gas is present, and the process starts over again.

So yes, it seems counter-intuitive that a heat source can be used to cool a chamber. But the heat is only used to generate ammonia vapor from a water-ammonia mixture. The rest of the process uses a maze to separate the water from the ammonia vapor, and an external heat exchanger to cool the hot ammonia vapor to room temperature and condense the ammonia vapor into liquid ammonia. Then, in the presence of hydrogen gas to lower the boiling point of the liquid ammonia, the ammonia evaporates and cools the chamber to be refrigerated.

The process uses several interesting physical-chemical processes: evaporation (which does the cooling by evaporating liquid ammonia in a hydrogen gas environment), absorption (which separates the ammonia vapor from the hydrogen gas by absorbing the ammonia into water), generation (which uses the gas flame to generate ammonia-water vapor from the water-ammonia mixture), separation (which separates the ammonia vapor from the water bubbles), condensation (which uses a heat exhanger to cool the hot ammonia vapor to room temperature and turn it into liquid ammonia). The whole process has no moving parts, is quiet, and can last a long time. It's kind of like a closed loop still with various ingenious ways to isolate the heat required to generate ammonia vapor from a water-ammonia mixture, from the heat absorbed by liquid ammonia evaporating in a hydrogen gas environment. It also manages to keep water, hydrogen, and ammonia separated or combined at the right times in the right places.

According to the linked article, heat from any source can be used to drive the generation part of the process, including solar thermal heat. Even electricity can be used, although that seems like it sort of defeats the off-grid advantage of an absorption system and it's also more costly than gas or solar.

 
Of course, intial cost is usually the killer in alternate en

I always thought I'd like to get a water-cooled natural gas or fuel-oil fired generator to run my central A/C unit.

and by harnessing the waste heat to

1- Heat a swimming pool
2- Make domestic hot water for the taps
3- Run an aboption("gas-fired") A/C it would be a major vctory in lowering operating costs, increasign efficiencies, cutting peak-load demands on the electrical grid and gaining flexibility in energy souces.
 
I remember York made a heat pump called the Trathlon that utilized a otto cycle engine burning natural gas instead of an electric motor to turn the compressor. On the heat side, the waste heat was pumped back into the house and was used to warm home. During the summertime, the heat was just dissapated in the outside coil. These units came out in the late 90's when natural gas was still extremely cheap, but they fell out of favor both because natural gas got more expensive, and because they required the typical maintence of a gasoline engine, like oil changes, tune-ups, etc. Many people didn't want a HVAC appliance that needed as much work as their automobile.

The Robur company however makes a gas absorbtion air conditioner/ heat pump that uses the same system as the refrigerators. The unit does not pump the ammonia refrigerant into the occupied space the way a freon-based unit does. The cooling unit is fully self-contained within the outdoor unit. It pumps chilled or heated water into the occupied space where a fan-coil unit then distributes it inside.

 
I have an Electrolux gas fridge which I salvaged from the garbage tip. It is a 1960s model, it works perfectly on gas though its electric element has failed, the reason it was thrown out. I have resprayed it and fitted new laminex to the top and door front. It works exceptionally well, usually about 1 or 2 degrees C inside, set to the warmest temperature. Set it any colder and it freezes everything.
It has just been "superseded" by a small electric fridge.
Two factors have co-incided to make me change - we have upgraded our solar power system, so we have more power than we can use at present. (It is summer here.) Also, I own a small undercounter bar fridge that I have had on loan to my work, but the kitchen is being renovated so I have got my little fridge back. I really notice the hum from the elec frige (though it is not noisy) as I got used to the almost silent gas fridge. The absorption mechanism is completely silent but the thermostat makes occasional creaking sounds.

I will keep the gas fridge on hand as we may need to change back in winter...

Chris.
 
Sudsmaster
Absorption fridges are exceptionaly inefficient on electricity. The conventional bar fridge uses about 400 watt/hours per day. The gas fridge would use about 2800 watt/hours per day for about the same capacity. A nice idea that doesn't work out in practise.

Chris.
 
Actually,

There are a whole number of reasons why gas powered refrigerators are pretty much limited to off-grid and camping needs today.
Part of it is the major push to electrify everything the US went through in the pro-nuclear power era.
Part of it is the simple fact that gas powered refrigeration won't work unless it is built well enough that it will last more or less forever. That is not good in an era which loves built-in obsolescence.
The problems some of the Servel units had with CO didn't help much, either. It is like the thumpers we all love so much, when their production line was so worn out it needed re-tooling, GM decided it just wasn't worth it...so sold junk to the mother-house of junk, White...
If I were building my own house, I would go with an absorber. You can still but them, but they aren't cheap. I lived with a very large capacity industrial unit for about 10 years. It good killed in the same move which did in my old Miele dishwasher.
It was Albert Einstein, by the way, who solved the gas pressure problems by introducing hydrogen into the closed system.
 

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