Transfair Refrigerator Cabinet Design-Part3

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TRANSFAIR ENGINEERING:

SURVEY ABOUT THE CFC FREE REFRIGERATOR


PRODUCTION PART 3:

Designing and prototyping


of refrigerator and freezer
cabinets and doors

May 2003

Walter Dirk Adler


Transfair GmbH
Mörsenbroicher Weg 179
D-40470 Düsseldorf
CONTENT
INTRODUCTION
BASIC DESIGN TYPES OF HOUSEHOLD REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERS

EUROPEAN STANDARD SIZES

- Stand alone units


- Built in units
Insulation thickness’

SELECTED MODEL DESIGNS

U-Type versus Panel Type Construction


Swimming Steel Body and food liner Construction

A. STEEL PARTS
1. SIDE PANELS

1.1. Sizes and design details


1.2. Punching
1.3. Roll forming
1.4. Edge bending

2. DOORS

2.1. Design
2.2. Rectangular and profile bending
2.3. Round bending

3. Option: STEEL TOP PLATE


Not recommended
3.1. Design
3.2. Punching tool
3.3. Bending tool

4. TOP AND BOTTOM CROSS RAIL

4.1. Design
4.2. Punching
4.3. Roll forming
4.4. Cutting

5. MIDDLE SEPERATOR CROSS RAIL

5.1. Design
5.2. Punching
5.3. Roll forming

6. SIDE PANEL BOTTOM REINFORCEMENT PROFILES

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 2


6.1. Design
6.2. Punching
6.3. Bending

7. COMPRESSOR SUPPORT PLATE


7.1. Design
7.2. Punching

8. FREEZER SIDE PANELS

8.1. Design
8.2. Corner punching and edge bending

B. PAINTING

C. THERMOFORMING
1. FOODLINERS

1.1. Designs
1.2. Food liner thermoforming moulds
1.3. Food liner punching
1.4. Food liner cutting

2. DOORLINERS

2.1. Designs
2.2. Door liner thermoforming moulds
2.3. door liner cutting

D. FOAMING
1. CABINETS

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 3


1.1. Designs
1.2. Cabinet moulds

2. DOORS

2.1. Designs
2.2. Door foaming moulds

E: ASSEMBLY
1. FOODLINER AND EVAPARATOR PREASSEMBLY

1.1. Pre-assembly jigs

2. CABINET PREASSEMBLY

3. DOOR PREASSEMBLY

4. DOOR GASKETS

4.1. Profiles
4.2. Cutting
4.3. Welding

G. EVAPORATORS AND CONDENSORS


1. EVAPORATORS

1.1. Tube straitening and cutting


1.2. Tube bending
1.3. Welding

2. CONDENSERS

1.1. Tube straightening and cutting


1.2. Tube bending
1.3. Wire on tube welding
1.4. Sheet punching and roll forming

H. PLASTIC INJECTED PARTS


ONLY FOR 2-DOOR MODEL:

1. FREEZER FRAME (2-door model)

FOR ROUNDED DOORS NEEDED:

2. TOP OR BOTTOM DOOR PROFILE WITHOUT HANDLE


3. DOOR PROFILE WITH HANDLE

FOR VERTICAL FREEZER NEEDED, FOR REFRIGERATOR WITH ROUND DOORS


RECOMMENDED:

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 4


4. TOP FRONT
5. TOP FRONT BASE
6. TOP FRONT COVER DECORATIVE
7. NAME PLATE

FOR LAMINATED TOP PLATE INSTEAD OF STEEL PLATE:

8. TOP PLATE SIDE PROFILES


9. TOP PLATE BACK PROFILE

10. SMALL DOOR BASKETS


11. BOTTLE BASKET
12. BUTTER BASKET COVER
13. EGG TRAY
15. VEGETABLE BASKET
15. GLAS FRONT PROFILE
16. GLAS BACK PROFILE

17. LIGHT BOX (WITH OR WITHOUT THERMOSTATE)

18. THERMOSTATE KNOB


19. LIGHT SWITCH KNOB
20. LIGHT COVER
21. HINGE COVER
22. BOTTOM FRONT PLATE
23. HOLE CABS for exchangeable door opening direction

24. VERTICAL FREEZER BASKET FRONT PLATE

PLASTIC INJECTION MOULDS

J. COMMERCIAL PARTS
1. COMMERCIAL STEEL PARTS

1.1. Steel sheets


Side panels (cut to square sizes)
top/bottom cross rail
Middle cross rail
Compressor support
Side panel reinforcement
Option: Top plate (cut square to sizes)
freezer liner envelop (cut to square sizes)
freezer liner sides (cut to square sizes)

1.2. Level feed screws with expandable rivet nut


1.3. Door hinges (top, middle and bottom) and support plates
1.4. Condenser fixings
1.5. screws, nuts, rivets, washer and o-rings

2. ELECTRICAL PARTS

2.1. Compressor
2.2. Thermostat
2.3. lamp holder
2.4. Lamp bulb 10w
2.5. Cables with plug

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 5


2.6. Earth cable
2.7. Thermostat cable
2.8. Terminals

3. SMALL PLASTIC PARTS

3.1. Hinge plastic underlay sheet


3.2. Plastic washer for hinges
3.3. Water drainage tubes
3.4. Polystyrene sheets for liners
3.5. Ice scraper
3.6. Hinge hole cover (2)
3.7. Protection foil for contacts
3.8 Compressor suspension with gum ring
3.9 Ice cube tray
3.10. Hollow profile (Polianda) back panel
3.11. Backside feet with screws
3.12. Door gasket profiles with magnetic insert
3.13. Cable fixings and joints
3.14. Plastic bag for Instruction Manual
3.15 Adhesive drainage profile
3.16 compressor water evaporation bag

4. PRINTINGS AND DECORATIVES

4.1. Drainage instruction panel


4.2. Electric scheme panel
4.3. Gas 134a panel
4.4. CFC free panel
4.5. Service and maintenance leaflet
4.6. Matricle panel
4.7. Name plate
4.8. Decorative control panel

5. COOLING CIRCUIT PARTS

5.1. Condenser
5.2. Heat exchanger
5.3. Evaporator tubes
- refrigerator
- freezer
5.4. Compressor charging tube
5.5. Anti-condensing tube
5.6. Filter

6. ADHESIVES

6.1. Adhesive Aluminium sheets


6.2. Adhesive masking tapes
-Polyethylen50mm w
-Polyethylene 500 mm w
-Aluminium 50 mm
6.3. Foam tapes
- 10x 2 mm
- 30 x5 mm
6.4. Adhesive joints
6.5. Foam blocks

7. CHEMICAL RAW MATERIALS

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 6


7.1. R134a
7.2. Cyclopentane
7.3. Polyurethane
- Polyol compound
- MDI
7.4. Cleaning material
7.5. Wax
7.6. Aluflux
7.7. Disogas
7.8. Bostic/Mastic

8. REST

8.1. Welding rods,


8.2. Flux
8.4. Glass plates
8.5. Laminate top plate
8.6. Packing materials
- Bottom plate (wood or EPS)
- Carton or EPS top (and corners) with shrinking ethylene foil
- Internal EPS plates
- Plastic foils

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 7


BASIC DESIGN TYPES OF HOUSEHOLD
REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERS

The freezer temperatures are <-18°C, <-12°C or <-5°C, the refrigerator temperatures are between 0-
10°C. Top freezer combinations can be single or 2-doors. The single door models have an internal
freezer box. The 2-door top freezer combinations are in large dimensions (16-18 cu.ft = 450-510l)
most sold in North America (more than 70% of the market volume of 10 Mio./year) and Middle
East, in medium and smaller dimensions in Far East, while in European markets (total maekt
volume 10 Mio./year) medium and smaller sizes (240-320l) are more sold - often as built-in units
(see underneath) or as stand alone units more bottom freezer combinations are sold than top freezer
combinations and. In India (Market volume 3.6 Mio/year) and China (Market volume 11 Mio./year)
still 80% of the market are models with volumes <200 l. But markets are changing. Beside of such
bread-and-butter models higher value models are growing steadily.

In the past the side-by-side combination was only found in USA, but meanwhile spread out in other
market areas.

Special refrigerator designs today provide not only 2 compartment with 2 different temperature
zones (refrigerator: 05-8°C, freezer: normally <-18°C), but add a vegetable zone with humidity
control and/or fresh fish and meat zone of about 0°C. some foodstuff needs high humidity (95%
r.H.), other low to keep fresh. In the last 5 years larger stand-alone unit (like side by side) are
growing in the upper market segments all over the world, but still totally are underneath 5-7% of
these markets, except USA.

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 8


Bottom
freezer
combination.

3-door model
with fresh
food drawer

Side by side
Refrigerator
Freezer
combination

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 9


European Standard Sizes for Stand-Alone
Refrigerators and Freezers:
The refrigerator sizes in Europe are strongly standardized as result of small kitchen designs and
furniture grids of 600x600mm, which is not only relevant for the built-in units, but also for stand-
alone units:

The normal width is 595 mm for stand-alone refrigerators, refrigerator-freezer-combinations and


vertical freezers. As result of foaming it increases by 2-5 mm on half height. The standard overall
deepness – with few exceptions – should be inside the 600mm grid, taking into consideration the
space for the condenser on the backside of the refrigerator of 40mm and the door in front of the
refrigerator of 50 mm it results to a side wall deepness of 508 mm. Some larger models >1750mm
increases the width of 600 mm to get bigger insulations, normally to 660mm.

In some Eastern European markets with lower purchase power there exist still some top freezer
models in the range of 200-220 l gross with height in the range of 130 mm.

To be able to offer refrigerators into large market distribution channels a producer must often be
able to offer the full range of models, at least different refrigerator-freezer combinations and
freezers in the heights about 1450mm and 1750mm. These standard models are the bread-and-
butter models in Europe often sold in scales with limited margins per sold refrigerator. Bigger
margins are earned on special designs, like large stand-alone in side-by-side (1750-1850 h x 900-
920mm w x750-860 d mm), classic retro design models, 3 door models and models with special
features. But to manufacture these special designs a much bigger investment in equipment and
tooling is needed. For marketing and image reasons it is important for a brand to have a state-of-art
model in their program and to advertise it to show the technical and quality performance, even if
their sales and profit is irrelevant, taking into consideration the larger investment. By achieving a
high quality image the bread-and-butter models of this brand can be sold better.

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 10


For example Samsung has purchased their top model design with complicated tandem evaporator
controls (see Transfair
Engineering: Cooling circuit
design, Chapter 5.5.6.) from
Prof. Rademacher and his team
from Maryland University for
about US$ 1 Mio and presented
it into different new markets.
But their main sales were made
on cheaper models. So such high
investment on design was
cheaper as it could be reached
by a marketing campaign to
build up such an image.

Dimensions for a
typical side by side
refrigerator-freezer
combination

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 11


Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 12
Insulation thickness
Minimum insulation for refrigerators is 35 mm.

In 1997 and 1998 a lot of refrigerator manufacturing companies concentrated to increase wall thickness to reach
energy consumption levels above the class C acc. to international classification. Some even uses insulation in
the level of 50-65 mm for refrigerators. But since 2000 the insulation of refrigerators went back to previous
thicknesses by developing higher energy efficient cooling circuits, using high efficient compressors, better
adjusted cooling circuits, eliminating accumulators etc. (see Transfair Engineering: Survey about CFC-free
Refrigerator Production - Part 4: Designing and Prototyping of Refrigerator and Freezer Cooling Circuits,
Düsseldorf 2003).

Minimum insulation for freezers is 50 mm.

To reach energy consumption levels above the class C acc. to international classification an insulation in the
level of 60-65 mm is used, but also in this case more efficient cooling circuits can reach often much lower
energy consumption that increased insulation (see Transfair Engineering: Survey about CFC-free Refrigerator
Production - Part 4: Designing and Prototyping of Refrigerator and Freezer Cooling Circuits, Düsseldorf 2003).

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 13


Proposed Model design platform and sizes:

Parameters:
h Refrigerator height
l Side panel length l
d1, d2 Height of upper and lower doors

Fixed values:
c Top panel height: 40 mm
to enable freezer front control if needed
8 mm distances between to doors
s Front base height: 50 mm
f Feet height 25 mm +0/-15
w Width of refrigerator: 595 mm
d deepness of refrigerator: 600-630 mm
(Bombée door type)
wp Width of Side panel: 508 mm

Proposed models:

First phase:

1250h x 595w x 630 d 2-door top freezer


1450h x 595w x 630 d 2-door bottom freezer
1650h x 595w x 630 d 2-door bottom freezer

Further phases:

1250h x 595w x 630 d 1-door top freezer


1650h x 595w x 630 d 1-door refrigerator
1650h x 595w x 630 d 1-door freezer
1850h x 595w x 630 d 2-door bottom freezer
1749h x 902w x 679 d Side by Side model
850h x 595w x 630 d Table top refrigerator
with freezer compartment

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 14


MODERN SWIMMING
PANEL CONSTRUCTION
Till today American and Far East producers use a U-bend steel cabinet construction, while nearly all
European use a panel construction often combined with swimming self positioning panels, cross
rails and food liners which do not need so tight tolerances during manufacturing.

What are the main differences concerning required tolerances of material and manufacturing
processes, stability and costs?

U-bend construction requires very narrow tolerances concerning:


- steel sheet sizes (sides, diagonals, thickness),
- punching, blanking and piercing positions,
- profiling bends and dimensions,
- edge bending and u-bending,
- welding of upper right and left corner and, if made, cross rails, separator sheet between
compressor compartment and foam and/or steel back sheet, and
- exact and rectangular pre-assembly of the steel body parts for welding and exact pre-assembly of
the food liner.

Any small deviation will accumulate in the upper right and left corner cuts – as a result of the U-
bend- where you can find overlapping or space. These corners are under insulation and quality points
of view already one of the most sensitive areas. The gasket has always from its side problems to
close properly at these corners as a result of
- burrs of door gasket welds in these corners,
- lack of magnet stripe because of gravity and
- less elasticity as a result of welding.
If also the metal body is bad manufactured (overlapping/lack of material) hot wet air will condense
or even enter into the refrigerator. And if these corners of a u-bend model are even not welded and
pre-painted sheets or popular surfaces with metallic looks are used, the steel will corrode very fast.
These areas are visible each time the door is opened and the insulation will be further reduced by the
corrosion.

In addition deviations can cause foam leaks, scratches or bends during foaming and last not least
cause problems in the door assembly (hinge positions, rectangularity) which needs at the end a lot
more adjustments.

All developing countries still have many workers with low technical understanding, low industrial
experience and low benchmarks concerning quality and efforts of being 100% perfect. Under such
working circumstances a construction should be selected in a way that it can absorb more deviations
in material and work operations as others.

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 15


Customers today want an organic refrigerator form not only with rounded doors (Bombée type),
but even rounded in 3 dimensions easier to be performed with plastic tops allowing to round from
the sides to the top. In this case steel on top is obsolete and a U-form is wasting steel by about 15%.

The market demand in colours and metallic looks (metallic colour or plastic foils on steel sheets)
are increasing on stand-alone refrigerator models often not anymore possible to be realized in the
painting lines of the refrigerator manufacturer. Therefore the manufacturers went over to use more
and more pre-painted or other surface treated steel sheets for their refrigerator. But U-form
refrigerators with these pre-painted or other treated sheets have the corrosion problem while panel
type construction covers the blank cutting parts of the steel inside the top cover so no rust could be
seen.

All these U-shape steel cabinet problems can be significantly reduced, but not eliminated with a
construction nowadays used in Europe.

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 16


SWIMMING PANEL CONSTRUCTION (till cabinet foaming)
Such a body construction consists normally up to the foaming only of 2 steel side panels, reinforced
with a profile in the compressor compartment area, 2-3 cross rails on the upper and lower front and
as middle traverse in case of a 2 door model, the food liner(s) and a hollow profile sheet of PE/PP-
copolymer (Trade name: Polianda) covering the foam on top, back and bottom including the
compressor compartment, with parts already mounted inside the foam area (evaporator, anti-dew
coil, etc.

A swimming construction still needs side panels and cross rails (=front traverses) punched and
bended with tolerances of 0.3-0.5 mm and vacuum foamed food liner with max. 3 mm tolerances; but
normally no deviation can accumulate; de-bending because of heat does not have such bad results
like in a rigid u-bend construction. But the main advantage is the quite high tolerances during pre-
assembly operations can be absorbed.

How these tolerances can be absorbed and how at the end we


receive a correct manufactured and dimensioned refrigerator?
The trick is the foaming during which all parts are correct
positioned and with the foam fixed.

Then swimming construction was developed 1981-1982


together with new stationary designs of cabinet foaming
fixtures.

A foaming fixture closes in 3 phases:

1st Phase: Adjustment of liner position by plug entry

In the first phase the refrigerator foodliners are correctly


positioned and centered. Either the plug moves down
(Hennecke, Perros/QS, OMS, Krauss-Maffei) or the bottom
with still open side walls moves upwards (Cannon Crios).

Under the condition that the jig is calibrated, the plug is really
centered (Cannon Crios and Hennecke have 2 calibrated

centering pins and 2 holes in each plug


support, so that by correct calibration
each plug can be put on each station
without any adjustment.

With a NC-made cube plug the jigs


should be 1 or twice per year calibrated
centering of plug and side walls, parallel
side walls, parallel closing, correct
rectangular top etc.).

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 17


2nd Phase: Adjustment of side panels to liner by
turning the side support and closing into the upper
lock profile.

In the 2nd phase the side panels are aligned by the


turning side walls with finally are locked, so that the
tolerances between these 2 side walls and the liner
should remain inside of 1 mm (except diagonals,
which could be 2-2,5 mm)

At this stage the 2 side panels are parallel, but still one
panel could be nearer to the top support as the other
one. The 3rd phase adjust it by turning the bottom and
compressor compartment support into the closing this the 3rd phase

3rd Phase: Adjustment of top and bottom and right positioning of side panels by closing the
bottom compressor support

But at this stages the upper and lower


cross rail as well as the middle cross rail
still could be slightly incorrect, for
example not on the same level as the side
panels, or slightly turned and some of
these mistakes can be corrected by the
quite high foam pressure if the
refrigerator is correctly foamed and if the
construction details allow it.

How to foam correctly?

Quality relevant factors are

- Foam materials and its characteristics (see Transfair Engineering: Foaming today);
- The geometry of the refrigerator cavity to be filled with foam and

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 18


- The bath tube position of jig (refrigerator door opening upwards); foaming in bell position (door
opening downwards) is not economic and still reduces foam quality. It needs 2-3 foaming
machines working in parallel to inject at same time with 2-3 mixing heads inside the refrigerator
back wall;
- The foam injection point, which should allow injecting the Polyol-Isocyanate compound mixture
in a central area, which minimize the distances the foam, has to rise and its quantity differences
needed to fill bigger walls of freezers and thinner walls of fridges. The best injection point is in
the middle areas of the back wall, slightly in direction to upper side if freezer is up or more in
direction to lower side if freezer is down. But such so called top flow jigs are about 30% more
expensive. The second best position is in the back wall from compressor compartment mainly
used today or even from the top in the back wall. Injection in the bottom plate is also bad for the
quality and to foam by this way medium and large refrigerators it needs 3-5% more foam to
squeeze the material the long way to fill all cavity areas. It causes density differences.

So if the foam pressure on the cross rails are still sufficient it will push the upper and lower cross
rails in the upper corners of the cabinet mould to reach the same front level to doors as the side
panels (+/- 0,3mm). And even the middle cross rail on a 2-door model will be squeezed by the foam
pressure so that the front of this cross rail to the doors will be on the same level as the front of the
side panels to the door (+/- 0,3mm). But this can be reached only by optimal foam injection inside
back panel from backside of refrigerator or from compressor compartment side and only if the
materials, its quality, temperature and foam rise time is good selected.

If we have to fight to get from a bottom plate injection sufficient material inside the top insulation
inside the foam rise time, how it can built up the pressure to position the cross rail there correctly?

Construction details are very relevant to use the cabinet foaming station to reduce tolerances
and of course the stations and jigs must be correct and regular calibrated to reduce tolerances.

Transfair Refrigerator Design p. 19

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