Wait 24 hours before powering up A/C or fridge?

  • Thread starter Thread starter DaveC426913
  • Start date Start date
DaveC426913
Gold Member
Messages
24,118
Reaction score
8,244
TL;DR
This is always recommended by manufacturers. Is it necessary?
Is it just a precautionary thing? I mean, it can't hurt to wait 24 hours, but is it necessary?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
DaveC426913 said:
TL;DR: This is always recommended by manufacturers. Is it necessary?

Is it just a precautionary thing? I mean, it can't hurt to wait 24 hours, but is it necessary?
After power failure? Purchase? Installation? What's the circumstance? The appliance hasn't magically appeared in place....
 
Apparently it has to do with the compressor lubricating oil. During transport and setup the unit may have been tipped allowing the oil to flow out of the compressor into the closed refridgerant lines leaving the compressor with little to no lubrication.

Turning the compressor on prematurely could damage the unit. It could overheat or moving parts would suffer excessive wear and tear.

The manufacturer doesn’t know how the unit was treated and so places a warning to not turn the unit on for at least 24 hrs to let the lubricating oil to settle.

It also allows the manufacturer some legal cover should they deny expensive warranty repairs because the customer didn’t follow recommendations.
 
  • Informative
  • Like
Likes berkeman and Bystander
It is not always necessary after transport.
It supposedly gives the liquid refrigerant, gas, and the lubrication, a chance to arrange its place in the system following the disturbance.
 
  • Informative
  • Like
Likes jedishrfu and Bystander
Bystander said:
After power failure? Purchase? Installation? What's the circumstance? The appliance hasn't magically appeared in place....
Oops. Anytime is has been moved.
 
jedishrfu said:
Apparently it has to do with the compressor lubricating oil. During transport and setup the unit may have been tipped allowing the oil to flow out of the compressor into the closed refridgerant lines leaving the compressor with little to no lubrication.

Turning the compressor on prematurely could damage the unit. It could overheat or moving parts would suffer excessive wear and tear.
This is much like what I hear, yes.
 
Baluncore said:
supposedly
This is the crux of my question: supposedly.


I guess it is an intractible question.

It can't hurt to tell consumers to leave a device to settle for 24 hours. And no one is going to say 'no, go ahead, bounce it off a tampoline then fire it up immediately!'

It's like a zombie rule. It will live on whether or not it remains necessary. (A bit like requiring passengers to turn electronic devices off during takeoff.)
 
DaveC426913 said:
I guess it is an intractible question.
If your new refrigerator does not start to operate correctly, the manufacturer would tell you to turn it off for 24 hours, but by then, the food would have been wasted. So they tell you up front to keep it off for 24 hours, to cover their proverbials. They know you will turn it on immediately and check it is working before putting food in it. If it does not work, you will turn it off for 24 hours, like they suggested, and it will fix itself.

Here is a similar example.
In PF, when you change your watch status on a thread, the menu bar becomes unavailable for about 3 seconds, covered by an unnecessary "your changes have been saved" banner. Is it always necessary to delay, or is the manufacturer, Greg, enforcing the wait because sometimes it is necessary, to prevent PF from getting its notification knickers in a knot?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Baluncore said:
If your new refrigerator does not start to operate correctly, the manufacturer would tell you to turn it off for 24 hours, but by then, the food would have been wasted. So they tell you up front to keep it off for 24 hours, to cover their proverbials. They know you will turn it on immediately and check it is working before putting foot in it. If it does not work, you will turn it off for 24 hours, like they suggested, and it will fix itself.

Here is a similar example.
In PF, when you change your watch status on a thread, the menu bar becomes unavailable for about 3 seconds, covered by an unnecessary "your changes have been saved" banner. Is it always necessary to delay, or is the manufacturer, Greg, enforcing the wait because sometimes it is necessary, to prevent PF from getting its notification knickers in a knot?
I'm not sure if that answers my question...

Is it true that I risk damaging my fridge/AC if I turn it on without waiting 24 hours?
 
  • #10
DaveC426913 said:
Is it true that I risk damaging my fridge/AC if I turn it on without waiting 24 hours?
I don't think it will be damaged, but it may not cool properly.

There were some fridges in the 1960s that would stop working. Turning them off and upside down for 24 hours would fix them.

Some AC systems can reverse themselves internally, and freeze the house solid in winter. Turning them off for 24 hours can fix those.
 
  • Informative
Likes DaveC426913

Similar threads

  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
5K
  • · Replies 30 ·
2
Replies
30
Views
3K
Replies
11
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
545
Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
17
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
2K