A normal fridge uses 120 v or 230 v and about 100 watts.
A fridge may or may not have a few transistors in it, these are electrical components that would probably be part of the control circuitry. Transistors used to be very common components of most electrical appliances. The cooling process of the fridge has nothing to do with transistors and is handled by a compressor and a heat exchange pump
Yes, as long as the bar fridge wattage is less than 650 W
A closed loop system is one where the ouput of the system is at least part of the input. In a refrigerator, the output of the cooling system (the cold air inside the refrigerator) is measured, and is fed back into the system to determine whether the system needs to continue cooling. An example of a fridge that was an open loop system would be one that turns on and cools for 1 hour every 6 hours, regardless of internal temperature.
it is not wise to remove this device it is in place for your safety it is also wise to note over time these device do false trip for no reason.Some will trip with an induction load like a fridge . have it tested .........................
In general, multiply the (rms) current by the (rms) voltage to get the power. If the voltage to the appliance is 120 Volts, then the power of 4.2 Amps is 504 Watts. If the voltage is 240 Volts, then 1008 Watts. Note: To be technically accurate, you must also multiply the cosine of the phase-angle between current and voltage. For any typical appliance, this is 1 and can be ignored. <<>> There are zero watts in 4.2 amps. Watts = Amps x Volts. Without a voltage stated the wattage can not be calculated.
It will depend on the make, model and year of the refrigerator that you are working on........
refrigerator
The correct spelling is refrigerator.
fridge
Depends on what refrigerator you are interested in. They all have a label somewhere, usually in the refrigerator compartment that lists the current. My refrigerator has a rating of 11.6 Amps. This is not a consistent current, but would be when the compressor is running.
fridges or fridge's if possessive i.e. (The fridge's contents were old.)
Yes. The refrigerator is set to hold a certain temperature, that's probably cooler than the environment where the fridge is sest. When you open the door, the cold air will leak out, so the fridge will start working to get the temperature down again. If you were to shut the door the temperature inside would drop rather quickly, and the fridge could stop working for awhile. But as long as the door is open, the temperature will remain high and the fridge will keep working. And as long as it's working it will be using up electric energy.
A refrigerator is commonly shortened to "Fridge" in Britain.
well ur fridge can stop working it may lose power or something but its better if you dont mess with it ...
Same thing. Fridge is a slang word.
He was known as "The Refrigerator" or abbreviated "The Fridge".
in the fridge