SRQ Appliance Repair Freezer stoppped working

The Usual Suspects — Why Freezers Quit in Sarasota

After years of diagnosing appliances in this area, I can tell you: about 80% of freezer failures come down to five things. Some are embarrassingly simple. Others require a professional and a multimeter.

Filthy condenser coils

This is the number-one thing homeowners overlook. Those coils — usually at the bottom behind a kick plate or on the back of the unit — are supposed to release heat. When they’re caked with dust, pet hair, and whatever else accumulates in a Florida kitchen, the compressor can’t reject heat efficiently. It runs hotter, cycles longer, and eventually just can’t maintain 0°F. I pull coil covers off units in Sarasota homes and find half an inch of grime. That’s not neglect — that’s just life with two dogs and central AC circulating everything around the house.

Worn-out door gaskets

The rubber seal around your freezer door degrades over time. It cracks, warps, loses its magnetism. And in a humid climate like ours, a bad gasket doesn’t just let cold air escape — it lets moisture in. That moisture turns to frost on the evaporator coils, which blocks airflow, which makes the freezer work even harder. Vicious cycle. The dollar-bill test is the quickest check: close the door on a bill, try to pull it out. Slides right out? That gasket is done.

Evaporator fan failure

This fan sits inside the freezer compartment and pushes cold air around. When the motor burns out or the blades get jammed by ice buildup, air stops circulating. You’ll notice the freezer feels cold near the back wall but warm everywhere else. Sometimes you can hear it — a grinding or squealing noise that wasn’t there before. Other times, dead silence where there used to be a quiet hum.

Compressor problems

The compressor is the engine of the whole system. It pressurizes refrigerant, drives the cooling cycle, and is by far the most expensive part to replace. When it fails, you get zero cooling. Listen for the hum — if you stand next to the unit for 30 minutes and hear nothing but silence, the compressor may have seized. At that point, you’re looking at a repair bill that often makes replacement the smarter financial move, especially on units over 12 years old.

Start relay failure

The start relay is a small component that kicks the compressor on. When it goes bad, the compressor tries to start, fails, and clicks off — over and over. Unplug the fridge, pull the relay off the compressor (it’s usually a small box that plugs right in), and shake it. Rattle like dice? It’s toast. This is actually one of the cheaper fixes — the part itself runs $15–$40 — but you need to know what you’re looking at.

DIY Troubleshooting That Actually Works

Before you schedule a service call, run through these checks. I’m not talking about YouTube rabbit holes where someone tells you to replace the main control board. I mean practical, no-tools-required steps that solve real problems.

1. Check the obvious

Power cord plugged in? Breaker tripped? Sarasota gets hit with afternoon storms almost daily from June through September, and lightning-induced power surges trip breakers constantly. I’ve driven to service calls only to flip a breaker switch and leave.

2. Look at the thermostat

Somebody bumped the dial. A kid was playing with buttons. The digital display is showing 15°F instead of 0°F. It happens more than you’d think. USDA says 0°F for safe frozen food storage — anything above that and you’re on borrowed time.

3. Open the door and assess

Is the freezer packed like a game of Tetris? The evaporator fan needs space to push air around. If bags and containers are jammed against the back wall and crammed over the vents, there’s your problem. Pull some stuff out, rearrange so there’s breathing room. Ideal fill level is around 75–85%. Full enough to hold cold mass, open enough for circulation.

4. Inspect the frost

A thin, even layer of frost inside? Normal, especially in manual-defrost models. A thick, uneven wall of ice coating the back panel or around the evaporator cover? That’s trouble. It means the defrost cycle isn’t running — could be the defrost timer, the defrost heater, or the defrost thermostat. Unplug the unit, let it thaw for 12–24 hours with towels on the floor, plug it back in. If it freezes up again within a week, the defrost system needs professional attention.

5. Clean those coils

Pull the fridge away from the wall. Pop off the bottom panel. Grab a coil brush or the crevice tool on your vacuum. Five minutes of work that can drop the compressor temperature by 10–15 degrees and bring a struggling freezer back to life.

Name:
SRQ Appliance Repair

Address:
3959 Yellowstone Cir Sarasota 34233

Phone:
(941) 233-0641

Website:
https://srq-appliancerepair.com/

Hours:
Mon-Fri: 8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Sat: 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Sun: Closed

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How useful was this post?

    Click on a star to rate it!

    Average rating 5 / 5. Vote count: 284

    No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.