In the summer the warm exhaust from the fridge gets dumped into the kitchen along with heat from cooking. Then the cooling system has to work harder, or if there is no cooling system it just means less comfort and fans running more.

So I have to ask, why don’t refrigerators have a duct so the warm air can be vented outside in the summer?

In the winter I actually adjust the fridge temp to be colder so food lasts longer because the output is beneficial anyway.

  • breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    shouldn’t the refrigerator be sealed so external heat doesn’t affect it? Maybe im misinformed on how that works

    • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      It’s just a heat pump. Essentially, and without going into how, heat is pumped out of the insulated box of the refrigerator and dumped into the space outside that box i.e. your kitchen. The house’s air conditioner does essentially the same thing on a larger scale, pumping heat outside your house. Heat pumps can work in reverse too for warming your house. The OP is concerned that waste heat from a refrigerator needs to be handled by the house AC and feels that it might be more efficient to pump that heat directly outside the house.

    • manucode@infosec.pub
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      7 months ago

      The question was not about the heat of the kitchen affecting the fridge. While keeping its inside cool, the fridge produces some heat that it has to dump somewhere. Standard kitchen fridges just dump this heat into the kitchen. OP proposed connecting the fridge to the outside of the house to dump the heat there.