Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
h a l f b a k e r y
You think: Aha! We go: ha, ha.

idea: add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random

meta: news, help, about, links, report a problem

account: browse anonymously, or get an account and write.

user:
pass:
register,


                                               

Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.

Seamless Refrigerator

A refrigerator that is built so that things can't get lost under it.
  (-1)
(-1)
  [vote for,
against]

One of the biggest problems with my refrigerator; Things get lost underneath it. To fix this I propose that refrigerators directly lie on the ground. The reason refrigerators don't do this is twofold: it makes it easier to open the door and it allows the refrigerator to be picked up.

There are many solutions for the door problem. One would be to have the door slide down like a garage door, down to the bottom of the fridge. It could be similarly automated, and since it is inside it would not develop issues like a garage door tends to.

Picking up-wise; just have handles. Or rather, more interestingly, a set of bars with wheels on the end that can be cranked onto the ground, like a jack on a car. Moving a refrigerator is typically a multiple person activity. With these wheel legs, though, the task could be effortlessly accomplished solo.

There may be some ventilation issues that I don't precisely understand, but I'm sure that can be more easily set at the top of a refrigerator than at the bottom.

Alizayi, Nov 24 2011

Fridge Risers http://mobile.walma...-Bed-Risers/5148131
(can also be used for beds) [swimswim, Nov 25 2011]

Early refrigerator http://en.wikipedia...e:Monitor_refer.jpg
Highly visible dissipator coils. [8th of 7, Nov 26 2011]

[link]






       6" legs.
pocmloc, Nov 24 2011
  

       I would avoid any sort of garage door solution as it's far too likely to be hard to insulate well, both at the sliding track seams and at the door joints. Furthermore, such a door would have to be thinner than thermodynamically optimal in order to roll.   

       Simple solution is to design the fridge with the door seam above the ground.   

       Simpler solution: put a trim strip on the floor in front of the fridge hole.   

       Note that fridges like to be kept level, also, so leveling feet would be needed which would raise it off the ground a little.
RayfordSteele, Nov 24 2011
  

       Sit the fridge on a lump of play-doh. Cheap, adjustable, and colourful!
mitxela, Nov 24 2011
  

       Aha! How about a refrigerator entirely made from such a sculptable substance? Also, by inside, I mean indoors. There would be considerably less nests built in such a refrigerator than tend to exist in a car garage.
Alizayi, Nov 24 2011
  

       What [pocmloc] said. And to retrofit old fridges, you could use bed risers, linked.
swimswim, Nov 25 2011
  

       Just out of curiosity, I'm wondering exactly *what* you lose under your fridge? The only thing that can fit under mine is dust!
xandram, Nov 25 2011
  

       For those of us with valuable dust collections, that could become quite an issue!
pocmloc, Nov 25 2011
  

       Magnets, food, money, small vehicles. Pretty much anything can be lost it seems.
Alizayi, Nov 25 2011
  

       [-] Flat bottoms are terrible ideas, some supermodels notwithstanding.
FlyingToaster, Nov 25 2011
  

       // Pretty much anything can be lost it seems //   

       Ammunition. All sorts of ammunition, particularly rimless types like 9mm P and .45 ACP seem to have a horrid attraction for the undersides of fridges. Bottleneck rounds tend to roll in a curved path, allowing them to be retrieved, but the smaller stuff thends to make a bee-line for that dark, inaccesible region under the fridge ... the last time we had a thorough clear-out, we had enough ammo to start (or stop) a small insurrection. And there were blasting caps as well ...
8th of 7, Nov 25 2011
  

       A friend of mine has a cat that somehow manages to shimmy under his fridge. Now how [8th] put his anno before this info instead of after is a mystery.
swimswim, Nov 26 2011
  

       A big chunk of the reason why fridges don't sit flat is so they can draw air under and up the coils in the back.   

       In order to handle this with a flush fridge, you would either need side access (dificult for most fridges set into cabinets or similar), or forced convection from the top (The continous fan required would eat a noticeable amount of power).   

       A better solution would be to raise the fridge enough so you can get underneath it easily, as [swimswim]'s link suggests.
MechE, Nov 26 2011
  

       What if these coils where built inside the fridge? So that the actual fridge part starts a bit higher?
Alizayi, Nov 26 2011
  

       coils under the sink counter to enable faster dish-drying (for those that do it the old fashioned way) and frozen food defrosting.
FlyingToaster, Nov 26 2011
  

       How are the coils going to be built inside the fridge? The entire point is to allow them to dump the heat removed from the fridge to the outside air. They could be detached from the fridge, but that's going to require a more elaborate build in, and make it much harder to place/replace the fridge.   

       Using them to dry dishes (or even heat an oven) is probably feasible, but a second stage heat pump might be required to concentrate the heat enough.
MechE, Nov 26 2011
  

       I suppose I don't understand why the coils can't go into an box that is within the main refrigerator body, but not within the insulation of the refirgerator and with vents in it to let in outside air. It undeniably would take more effort to replace such a piece, but it would take an awful lot of effort to replace a magnetic letter 'A', also.
Alizayi, Nov 26 2011
  

       <link>
8th of 7, Nov 26 2011
  

       The coils are already mounted on the rear, the problem is airflow. Where are you going to mount them to get as much? Any place internal to the case would have a restricted airflow, and it pretty much needs to be open top and bottom for natural convection to work.
MechE, Nov 26 2011
  

       Erm, in the Land of the Rising (level of boredom with my job), the fridge in here doesn't have any external coils. They are in the body of the fridge.   

       Going (presumably) outwards it's the food compartment, then the insulation, then the coils, then a metal shell over the whole thing conducting the heat away from coils.   

       Anyway, what the world really needs a seamless round fridge, with a door that opens up on riser hinges and the racks for the food are mounted on a central axis with bearings. So, none of the food is at the back, cos you can turn the lot.
not_morrison_rm, Nov 27 2011
  

       I'm going to stop arguing cases, because someone is going to come up with an exception for everything. But as a rule, you need to dump heat to air. That air typically flows without any mechanical assistance. The air starts at the bottom, and the heat causes it to rise. Anything that prevents this will at a minimum reduce the efficiency of the fridge.   

       If the fridge is mounted back into cabinets (as is frequently the case), and the bottom is completely blocked, this air flow will not occur on the rear or sides, as there is no way for replacement air to reach the bottom of the coils (or sheet metal layer over the coils). Even with a few inches clear to the sides, you will get less than ideal air flow.   

       In theory, a you could mount the coils in the door with the necessary vents and allow in cabinet mounting, but this would require significant additional connections to the door, which would introduce a significant point of failure.
MechE, Nov 27 2011
  

       Ferris wheel fridge. With a crank.
Alizayi, Nov 27 2011
  
      
[annotate]
  


 

back: main index

business  computer  culture  fashion  food  halfbakery  home  other  product  public  science  sport  vehicle