View Full Version : Issues with fridge or upright freezer?
kp11364
05-27-2021, 03:48 PM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Stu from NYC
05-27-2021, 04:08 PM
We have an upright freezer in our garage and no problems
Carla B
05-27-2021, 04:19 PM
We bought a small GE inexpensive chest freezer for the garage in 2011. Still working just fine after all this time without any maintenance or repair issues. Just needs defrosting a couple times per year.
kathyspear
05-27-2021, 05:07 PM
2nd fridge in our garage ~ 20 cu. ft. No problems.
kathy
splashes
05-27-2021, 05:18 PM
run a separate electrical outlet from the panel with no gfi
rustyp
05-27-2021, 05:49 PM
We have an upright freezer in our garage and no problems
A chest freezer would be a better choice for a garage. With an upright upon opening the door you have a chance of dinging the new Camry.
audrajo
05-28-2021, 04:42 AM
We did. Were told any refrigerator built before 2013 would trip the break. We live in McClure. Lived in Fernadina and had no problems with the refrigerator in the garage. Bought a new refrigerator and no more circuit breaker tripping.
bowlingal
05-28-2021, 04:47 AM
full size stand up freezer in garage....no problems. Better than a chest freezer because you can see what you have. with a chest freezer, everything is piled on top of each other, plus I don't have to defrost at all.
MrGolf
05-28-2021, 04:58 AM
We have a 25 year old Whirlpool refrigerator in our garage for past 5 years. No problem.
Jcr500b
05-28-2021, 04:58 AM
We put an upright freezer in our garage and had no issues at all.
jedalton
05-28-2021, 05:03 AM
same here
HiHoSteveO
05-28-2021, 05:08 AM
The problem was happening quite a bit a few years ago and there were many posts here.
It is very likely that the refrigerator and "Arc-Fault Circuit Breaker" (AFCI) that it is wired to, have a conflict.
The new arc-fault breakers are ultra sensitive to arcs within an older electric motor, so assume the refrigerator in the garage is an older model. A standard ground fault breaker "might" resolve the problem but you don't want to run afoul of the electrical code.
Consult an electrician.
There also used to be an issue with the outdoor post lights but don't hear about that much anymore.
thevillages2013
05-28-2021, 05:11 AM
run a separate electrical outlet from the panel with no gfi
Not necessary in most cases
Pinball wizard
05-28-2021, 05:26 AM
I changed the GFI from 15A to 20A and that fixed the problem. It was tripping on motor/compressor startup on occasion. My new GFI also has an audible alarm when/if it trips.
riley2011
05-28-2021, 05:28 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
I have both in the garage with no problems
riley2011
05-28-2021, 05:34 AM
A chest freezer would be a better choice for a garage. With an upright upon opening the door you have a chance of dinging the new Camry.
I disagree with the chest freezer. We had one and changed to an upright. It’s easier to see what’s in the freezer. There’s plenty of room for the car and the freezer.
cleosmum
05-28-2021, 05:55 AM
I have a full-size refrigerator in the garage, and did have some issues with the circuit breaker tripping when there was in electrical storm. I had an extra line run just for the refrigerator, and have not had any problems since. I don’t remember what it cost, but it was not expensive.
rjn5656
05-28-2021, 06:05 AM
I have a uprigight freezer in my garage for 10 years, no problem. I have a upright fridge out on my lanai, no issue.
Byronshirley
05-28-2021, 06:20 AM
We have an upright freezer in our garage and no problems
I do have upright freezer in my garage for about 12 years and no problem at all.
jimkerr
05-28-2021, 06:20 AM
Make sure it isn’t plugged into a GFCI outlet. They trip often with a fridge. If that’s the case, have an electrician run you a dedicated circuit and you’ll be back in business.
DeirdreFoster
05-28-2021, 06:21 AM
We put a stainless in the garage and found started showing rust marks on the finish. Still works, but a nuisance to keep rust free.
deantilman@comcast.net
05-28-2021, 06:26 AM
I have that problem whenever the house is power washed. Water gets in outside electrical outlet. Had to put a light feature on front porch that.burns 24 hours. Was tired of losing food.
drgoofy
05-28-2021, 06:43 AM
We had a problem with the GFI also. Once we added a dedicated line to the freezer, no more problems. We are still, however, having an issue with the pole light. Electrician will be here (again) next week!
Joeint
05-28-2021, 06:50 AM
I changed the GFI from 15A to 20A and that fixed the problem. It was tripping on motor/compressor startup on occasion. My new GFI also has an audible alarm when/if it trips.
I don't believe this is safe, the breaker is sized to the wire.
mziewacz
05-28-2021, 06:54 AM
Just a note to the person responding to the breaker tripping in the garage with a refrigerator. One recommendation was to go to a 20amp GFI .
The issue is if the wire is only 14 guage and not 12 guage and if there is a short, [B]the wire will burn and cause a fire saving the GFI breaker! Just a not of caution!!!
tallyhoer
05-28-2021, 07:19 AM
My neighbor lost $500 worth of food when freezer in garage lost power because of GFI tripping. All the outlets in the garage are GFI protected even if the outlet looks like a normal plug outlet.
I ran a heavy duty appliance extension cord and plugged my freezer into the garage door electric plug in the ceiling as it is not GFI protected. Worked fine.
FUSSY LADY
05-28-2021, 07:35 AM
You have to have a dedicated line for the refrigerator/freezer or it will continually go out!
nhtexasrn
05-28-2021, 07:44 AM
We have a fridge in our garage. No problems so far. They actually make fridges especially for the garage that you can buy but ours is just the one that came with the house and it was way too small.
Bigtony54
05-28-2021, 07:59 AM
I changed the GFI from 15A to 20A and that fixed the problem. It was tripping on motor/compressor startup on occasion. My new GFI also has an audible alarm when/if it trips.
Now thats illegal. That is against the electrical code
retiredguy123
05-28-2021, 08:10 AM
I changed the GFI from 15A to 20A and that fixed the problem. It was tripping on motor/compressor startup on occasion. My new GFI also has an audible alarm when/if it trips.
Just a note to the person responding to the breaker tripping in the garage with a refrigerator. One recommendation was to go to a 20amp GFI .
The issue is if the wire is only 14 guage and not 12 guage and if there is a short, [B]the wire will burn and cause a fire saving the GFI breaker! Just a not of caution!!!
Note that the circuit breaker function is totally different from the GFI function. If the circuit is rated for 15 amps, the breaker at the panel will trip when you plug in more than 15 amps. But, the GFI device measures an imbalance of incoming and outgoing current, and can trip with extremely low levels of amperage. I don't see a safety problem using a 20 amp GFI outlet on a 15 amp circuit because the breaker in the panel will still protect the wiring if the load exceeds 15 amps. But, I don't understand why a 20 amp GFI outlet should work better than a 15 amp. They should both perform the same basic function.
Travelingal702
05-28-2021, 08:15 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Six years ago I bought a larger refrigerator/freezer and put the original (with the house) refrigerator/freezer in the garage. I keep it for drinks. Have not had any problems, thus far.:pray::pray::pray:
fritzgb1
05-28-2021, 08:39 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Most Ref and freezers require a 20 amp circuit your outlet is probable only a 15 amp and more then likely why your having an issue or you have to much on that circuit . check the breaker to see or get an Electrician to look at it a good handy man can take care of it as well
MrFlorida
05-28-2021, 08:42 AM
No problems at all, chest freezer in garage.
BrianL
05-28-2021, 08:54 AM
We have 2 full upright freezers in our garage. I had 2 20-amp outlets added to the garage one dedicated for each freezer. Electrical code is that you do not have to have a GFI outlet for a freezer in the garage if the outlet is dedicated to the freezer. When the electrical contractor installed the outlets he insisted on installing with GFI outlets. I changed the outlets to non-GFI outlets myself. If we ever sell the house, I'll install replace the non-GFI outlets with GFI outlets as the outlets would no longer be dedicated to a freezer.
The recommendation for freezers is that the appliances not be on a GFI circuit as the motors in the freezers starting can occasionally cause the GFI outlet to trip. My recommendation is that you have a dedicated outlet installed for the appliance and have it be a non-GFI outlet.
seetshaw
05-28-2021, 08:54 AM
Have had my chest freezer in garage for 20 years. Sided it with insulation panels. Yes, electric does go out as is somehow connected to lanai and rain knocks it out. After 2nd time got alarm from Amazon. Very loud let’s me know it’s off, so I know to turn it back on after electrical failure.
ProfZ
05-28-2021, 09:18 AM
We have had both a chest freezer and an upright freezer; more importantly, from the outset we had installed a dedicated electrical outlet for their use. Not one problem in 9 years.
EdFNJ
05-28-2021, 09:39 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
I have a cheap ($125) Sam's club chest freezer in my garage for over 2 years. I keep a remote temperature alarm in it. It has never gone above -2 F despite the fact our garage faces due WEST and afternoon temps exceed 90F for 2/3rds of the day and into the evening. At this moment it reads -6F and it is already 84F in the garage at 10:30AM. Only gripe is I have to defrost it every 4-5 months from opening it in the high humidity in the garage. Didn't want to spend the $$$ for a self-defrosting model and an upright wouldn't fit plus this provides more than enough room for our needs. No electrical problems either.
Edit: There is one problem. My wife is just barely 5' tall and she kind of disappears when trying to get to something on the bottom!
EdFNJ
05-28-2021, 09:54 AM
My neighbor lost $500 worth of food when freezer in garage lost power because of GFI tripping. All the outlets in the garage are GFI protected even if the outlet looks like a normal plug outlet.
I ran a heavy duty appliance extension cord and plugged my freezer into the garage door electric plug in the ceiling as it is not GFI protected. Worked fine. Neighbor should look into a a remote WiFi temp monitor. Set it about +10 degrees and you have an early warning. The cheaper ones like this take a while to respond to change of temp (not instant) so set it with enough lead time. They also make them to monitor multiple sensors with different functions.
Cheap WiFI Temp Alarm (https://www.amazon.com/Wireless-Temperature-Humidity-Monitoring-Smartphone/dp/B08JP2TDSC?ref_=ast_sto_dp)
jjombrello
05-28-2021, 11:22 AM
Have had a garage refrigerator for about 23 years and not one problem
GeorgiaBorn
05-28-2021, 11:41 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Consider the directional exposure of your garage.We have a spare refrigerator w/ top freezer in our west-facing garage; with the brutal summer heat (even though we have attic fan, insulation out there) that frig works hard and seems to get mildew along the door seal, etc. It works now but who knows for how long (5 years and counting). No problem with circuit breaker.
SERENITY52
05-28-2021, 11:54 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
We have a 6' upright freezer in the garage. No issues at all. However we have a solar attic fan. We also have a garage fan that vents to the attic.
JayK!
05-28-2021, 01:23 PM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
No issue with breakers. Have chest freezer and lg. dorm refrig in garage. We insulated garage doors and crack open window for ventilation.
Guitarman1951
05-28-2021, 02:10 PM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Have a spare fridge on Lanai(enclosed) but gets very hot in the dead of summer. So far, no problems what so ever. Sister in law has a fridge in her garage and no problems either.
Marykess1802
05-28-2021, 05:29 PM
I have both in the garage with no problems
Have a large upright freezer and side by side frig in the garage. No problems in 20+ years.
art32163
05-28-2021, 06:44 PM
We have a 25 year old Whirlpool refrigerator in our garage for past 5 years. No problem.
That is an energy hog ... by a new and save a lot on electric .... I had a GE 2001 in another life and when I bought a nee one in 2006 whirlpool... what a difference ...wow
tovliteuser
05-28-2021, 10:40 PM
If the breaker in the service panel keeps tripping, you probably have an issue with the compressor motor of the freezer drawing too much current. Either that or the circuit is already drawing current for other connected devices and the freezer is causing the current to exceed the amperage rating of the breaker. If it is the gfi that keeps faulting out, then it is an entirely different problem. Even though it is required by code, you should not have your spare freezer on a circuit protected by a gfi. They are notorious for intermittently tripping and leaving you with hundreds of dollars in spoiled food. Unless it trips immediately after being plugged in, there is not much chance that the freezer has a ground fault issue. Use an unprotected outlet or run a new one (standard, unprotected) from the service box.
Rsenholzi
05-29-2021, 04:57 AM
I had a smaller freezer that I bought used. Within a year it broke. Instead of buying a new one, I bought a new refrigerator and moved the one I hated out to the garage. I was told you needed a dedicated line for a refrigerator. I put one in when I bought my refrigerator and have not had any problems since
G.R.I.T.S.
05-29-2021, 07:14 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
GFCI did trip at first during heavy rains. Problem solved by re-caulking outside electrical outlets. If you're unsure, install a new dedicated plug that's not on a GFCI.
Kgcetm
05-29-2021, 07:43 AM
You'll need to put it on a separate circuit without a GFI. I understand this is a code violation. Leaving on vacation and returning a week later to find that a GFI tripped and the garage refrigeration is full of spoiled food is enough to break code, however.
asiebel
05-29-2021, 08:15 AM
We have a refrigerator, a dorm size we keep drinks in. Never a problem.
steve1025
05-29-2021, 09:08 AM
Hi all,
Has anyone put a spare refrigerator or upright freezer in their garage? Any problems/issues (e.g. circuit breaker constantly going off?)
Thanks in advance,
Kevin
Bought a new fridge 8 years ago and moved the old one into the garage. Best thing I every did. The new one died 3 months ago. Still waiting for the replacement to come.
asiebel
05-29-2021, 09:15 AM
We have a refrigerator, a dorm size we keep drinks in. Never a problem.
Larchap49
05-29-2021, 10:03 AM
Refrigerators are supposed to have a dedicated breaker and have nothing else on the circuit. End of story
Crazyladycruz
05-29-2021, 10:33 AM
A chest freezer would be a better choice for a garage. With an upright upon opening the door you have a chance of dinging the new Camry.
Would this be the voice of experience??😝 Ouch!
emb2458
05-29-2021, 11:12 AM
We had same problem. Had to have a dedicated outlet installed. No problems since then.
Holpat39
05-29-2021, 12:42 PM
18cu. ft Whirlpool refrigerator in yhe garage since 2005. No problem yet.
RMarkland
05-29-2021, 01:05 PM
A refrigerator in the garage should not trip the breaker. HOWEVER, it is in a GFI receptacle which most likely also feeds your outdoor receptacles. My extension cords for Christmas lighting will when we have a big rain trip the GFI, which is what is supposed to happen. That means the refrigerator will also not have power. Running a dedicated circuit to the frig would solve that problem, or just checking every day that is operating.
brfree1411@aol.com
05-29-2021, 02:46 PM
We have a refrigerator so far no issues
cologal
05-29-2021, 04:07 PM
I had a 200 bottle wine cooler and a freezer in my garage. Never had any problems over the 12 years I was in TV!
allsport
05-29-2021, 05:23 PM
Fridge in the garage since 07 and no problems.
wiltma
05-29-2021, 05:57 PM
We had a small upright freezer in the garage for 17 years with no problems. The one thing we did to help it along in the heat of the summer was to put a small fan the blew on the back of the freezer on a timer than ran it during the day. It was still working fine when we moved.
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