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Home Energy Magazine Online May/June 1994
TRENDS
Do Refrigerator Thermostat "Setups" Save Energy?
In its February 1994 issue, Consumer Reports described tests
performed on a collection of upscale refrigerators. One feature tested was
energy use. The test procedure differed from the one the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) uses to rate refrigerators, however, because the freezer
temperature setting was 5deg.F lower in the Consumer Reports tests.
Since a refrigerator's energy consumption is quite sensitive to temperature
settings--both inside the refrigerator and in the kitchen, garage, or
basement--the energy use measured by Consumer Reports was higher than
that shown on the DOE labels. Thanks to Consumer Reports' measurements,
Home Energy can now answer a frequently asked question: How much does
the setting affect energy use in typical refrigerators?
The results are surprisingly consistent. Lowering the freezer temperature by
5deg.F increases energy use by an average of 18% (see Figure 1). The increase
is slightly larger for top freezers (22%). That translates into an average
annual electricity increase of 133 kWh.
Unfortunately, both the DOE and Consumer Reports' test procedures do not
realistically portray actual operating conditions. (The units are tested with
doors closed in a 90deg.F room for 24 hours.) But energy savings from raising
the refrigerator thermostat setting are probably at least 100 kWh per year for
the large refrigerators that were tested. Of course, any thermostat "setup"
should be done cautiously. Sometimes refrigerators are set colder than they
need to be, but a too-warm setting can lead to spoilage and other food safety
problems. The best first strategy is to ensure that the refrigerator is
adequately ventilated and kept in as cool a place as possible.
Consumer Reports also delved into setting ease, temperature uniformity,
stability, icemaker quality and so on. One finding was that energy costs
decline as the overall quality of refrigerators rises. Another was that the
more complicated the refrigerator is, the more likely it is to break down:
basic refrigerators that lacked through-the-door ice and water dispensers
needed fewer repairs than models with those features. Yet another finding was
that the "world's most efficient" Sun Frost RF-19 used roughly the same amount
of electricity as the most efficient conventional top-freezer model--the Amana
TZ21R2--but at a cost of $3,015, compared to $770.
-- Alan Meier

Figure 1. Measured refrigerator energy use: Consumer Reports
versus the DOE's Yellow Labels.
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