My power is generally pretty reliable, but when it does have issues, it often flickers violently. More than once, I thought the control board in my fridge got fried, but was luckily able to do the refrigerator equivalent to Ctrl+Alt+Delete and reset it.

I have an extra 800W UPS laying around, so I figured I’d give it a try and see if it would run it. I’m not really looking to use the UPS to keep it powered during an outage, just to deal with the power flickers/surges/brownouts that may damage it (surge protectors won’t protect against brownouts). Any additional cooling time during an outage would simply be a bonus.

To my surprise, it works. Not only works, but only seems to draw between 110 and 160 watts (compressor on, door open). However, I expected it to draw power in the 700-900 watt range. Granted, the last time I worried about refrigerator wattage was years ago when I lived in the boonies, had an older fridge, and had to resource-manage when I was running from the generator on a long outage.

Is that normal for a 26 cu ft refrigerator? I’d say it’s probably close to 10 years old. AFAIK, the UPS reports the wattage draw correctly (at least, the values were within expectations when I was using it with my desktop workstation). The manual for the fridge says 115v / 10 A but it doesn’t seem to use anywhere close to that.

Additionally, are there any hidden risks to running a refrierator from a UPS? It’s a pure sine wave UPS, so the power should be as clean as or cleaner than utility.

  • @aubeynarf
    link
    61 day ago

    be aware that most fridges have a defrost heater that runs perhaps daily to melt the ice off of the coils in the freezer. You’ll need to measure the power consumption with this heater on to know the peak power draw.

    under 200 W sounds correct for the compressor