|
Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > March 2006 > How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator
|
|
|
| How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator?
We all hear that keeping the fridge door open a long time lets the
cold out, but how long does this really take?
If most of the cold air falls out in the first 10 seconds, and only 10
percent more in the next 10, and 3 percent more in the next 10, then
after the first 10 seconds, there's really no rush.
Except I made up those numbers. Does anyone know any real numbers
about this?
| |
| Joseph Meehan 2006-03-30, 11:21 pm |
| mm wrote:
> How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator?
>
> We all hear that keeping the fridge door open a long time lets the
> cold out, but how long does this really take?
>
> If most of the cold air falls out in the first 10 seconds, and only 10
> percent more in the next 10, and 3 percent more in the next 10, then
> after the first 10 seconds, there's really no rush.
>
> Except I made up those numbers. Does anyone know any real numbers
> about this?
I is going to take a few more variables to get a good number. Is the
frig full, how full, does the stuff there repaint a lot of heat or loose it
quickly? Fill that thing up with cartons of milk and you could leave it
open a long time while loosing little, empty opening it for just five
seconds would likely dump most of the cold air.
--
Joseph Meehan
Dia duit
| |
| Big Al 2006-03-31, 12:21 am |
|
"Joseph Meehan" <sligojoe_Spamno@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Zp0Xf.67105$9I5.37699@tornado.ohiordc.rr.com...
> mm wrote:
>
> I is going to take a few more variables to get a good number. Is the
> frig full, how full, does the stuff there repaint a lot of heat or loose
it
> quickly? Fill that thing up with cartons of milk and you could leave it
> open a long time while loosing little, empty opening it for just five
> seconds would likely dump most of the cold air.
>
> --
> Joseph Meehan
>
> Dia duit
>
The ambient temperature is another unknown.
Al
| |
| Tony Hwang 2006-03-31, 12:21 am |
| mm wrote:
> How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator?
>
> We all hear that keeping the fridge door open a long time lets the
> cold out, but how long does this really take?
>
> If most of the cold air falls out in the first 10 seconds, and only 10
> percent more in the next 10, and 3 percent more in the next 10, then
> after the first 10 seconds, there's really no rush.
>
> Except I made up those numbers. Does anyone know any real numbers
> about this?
>
>
Hi,
All the stuff in there are cold. They all have to lose it to room temp.
To lose all the coldness, it'll take a long while like a day?
That is my guess. If it is empty, it may be different again.
| |
| nicksanspam@ece.villanova.edu 2006-03-31, 3:21 am |
| mm <NOPSAMmm2005@bigfoot.com> wrote:
>We all hear that keeping the fridge door open a long time lets the
>cold out, but how long does this really take?
One empirical chimney formula says cfm = 16.6Asqrt(HdT), so a 2'x2'x4'-tall
36 F fridge box with V = 16 ft^3 and A = 2'x2' top and bottom vents might
fill with 70 F room air in 16/cfm = 0.02 minutes, ie 1.2 seconds.
But if it's full of thermal mass with lots of surface, eg milk cartons and
jars, 70 F room air at 50% RH would keep flowing through the fridge box for
a long time and condense water vapor onto the mass surface and add lots of
heat to the fridge contents.
So it's best to keep the fridge nearly empty, given long door openings.
Nick
| |
|
| Got alot of time on your hands don't you!
Tom
"mm" <NOPSAMmm2005@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
news:134p22l7m91e5f0d91gosqoivq7qk302se@4ax.com...
> How long does it take for the cold air to leave the refrigerator?
>
> We all hear that keeping the fridge door open a long time lets the
> cold out, but how long does this really take?
>
> If most of the cold air falls out in the first 10 seconds, and only 10
> percent more in the next 10, and 3 percent more in the next 10, then
> after the first 10 seconds, there's really no rush.
>
> Except I made up those numbers. Does anyone know any real numbers
> about this?
>
>
|
|
|
|
|