Your Viking refrigerator may need gasket replacement in case of long usage. It is vital for normal functioning and high efficiency as a faulty or leaking refrigerator door wastes energy, increases your energy bill, and shortens your fridge life. Fortunately, it isn’t a difficult repair so you will be able to do it yourself. Open the door and pull up the rubber at the top of the door. You’ll probably have to work a little to get the old gasket out. Don’t be discouraged. You’ll get the hang of it. Loosen, but don’t take out, the screws at the top that hold the gasket in place. You want to get them loose enough that they release the gasket but don’t fall out. Go to the side of the door and loosen the screws there. Don’t go any lower than half way. Repeat it on the other side. Go back to the top of the door to find the strip that holds the gasket in place. It’s plastic or metal. Pull up on the gasket first, and then out toward you. Letting the old gasket hang, drape the new gasket on the door, matching its holes to the screws on the door. If you put Crisco or some similar greasy substance on the belt, it will go in much easier. The long ends of the new gasket will be dangling at the sides. You’ll fasten them soon. Just make sure what’s dangling is long enough to fit all the way around the door. If there are any gaps when you’ve finished, you’ll have to do this all over again. If it’s not done right, warm air will get into the refrigerator and cold air will seep out. Going back to the top, shove the new gasket under the retainer. Do the same thing on the side that opens. Fasten the side screws if there are any or else put the gasket under the retaining strips. Work your way down, first one side and then the other, removing the old gasket and sliding in the new. Keep checking that the dangling ends of the new gasket will meet at the bottom. While you’re working, don’t fasten the screws tightly because you may have to repeat all the steps if you find there’s a gap. When the side gaskets are loosely screwed in, work on getting the gasket around the corner after the old one is out. Working in the center bottom of the door, finish installing the gasket. Inspect the gasket to make sure it fits tightly everywhere when the door’s open and when it’s closed. Check to see if it twisted around the corners. If you find a gap or a twist, go back to it and reinstall the gasket. Tighten the screws. Or delegate a tough job to professional refrigerator maintenance helpers and relax.
November 26, 2023
AC is leaking from the coil – HVAC Troubleshooting in San Diego
Have you encountered a leaking air conditioner? This causes not the most pleasant feelings and deprives you of comfort. Before solving this problem, you should determine what exactly became the source of the air conditioner flow.