We have a 5-year-old maytag refrigerator that has started to stink in the last month and we can't figure out where the smell is coming from. We've cleaned underneath, vacuumed out the drip pan, removed all the food, but there's this smell that's particularly prevalent when you open the door. We've put baking soda in, but we just can't seem to get rid of it.
My wife says it smells like the compost bin, not like a mouse crawled in and died.
Any idea where smells can hide in the guts of a fridge?
In the walls,and gaskets. If a top freezer under the floor plate in the freezer, and in the duct work of the air circulator fan. Tricky to get rid of. Depending how long you can live without a frig you could take everything out and put in bowls of chlorine bleach water and let them evaporate through the entire box while running. Takes a couple of days. Then turn the box off ,open the door and let air out a couple of days.
It's always good to find advice from people who have dealt with the same problem before. When you say the plastic, is there any particular part you're referring to? The gasket seals? The doors or shelves?
And when you say Vanilla wash, do you really mean vanilla extract? Or some kind of cleaner I'm unfamiliar with? My wife was thinking of using one of those citrus-based cleaners.
She also is of the impression that the odor is strongest in the back by the air exchangers, but I'm not sure about that.
Thanks for the advice... How big a bowl of water/bleach? Seems like it would take quite a while for a large bowl to evaporate when it's being cooled (especially in the freezer :))
He's not talking about the whole thing evaporating, just as much as will do so with a medium or big size electric mixer mixing bowl size. I haven't done this, but it sounds like it would work. But I doubt you'll be able to notice that the level went down.
My Kenmore has a sticker on the fridge wall saying it is a special material that doesn't absorb odors. From that I deduced that some fridge and/or freezer walls absorb odors.
THE BEST way to eliminate the smell is by using charcoal. Its been proven. Someone left an uncooked chicken in their trunk in Florida for 3 days. Phew!!!! and Crab smell in a fridge.)
Dont buy a bag with the match lite/ easy lighting charcoal. Just a mixing bowl size of charcoal and let it sit open in the fridge.
On Sun, 6 Aug 2006 21:42:45 -0400, Tracy wrote (in article ):
I have never understood this theory. In the first place, only "activated" charcoal is effective. In the second, it will only remove impurities in the air. Unless you remove the source of the odor, it will regenerate as fast as you remove it.
Someone up thread mentioned an "orange cleaner". Don't. I can tell you from sad experience with a freezer it will leave it's own objectionable odor (I used "409"). After it was too late I looked at the small print on the label: "Not for refrigerators". Duh! I was able to get most of it out by leaving a small saucer of household ammonia in the freezer over night, although it took three treatments.
I have never tried vanilla, but I have read where you just end up with a vanilla smell permeating all your food.
I bought a used upright Hotpoint refrigerator that had a bad odor. Took the whole thing apart and cleaned every nook and cranny scrupulously. The odor remains to this day, several years later. I suspect it is due to bacteria in the insulation between the walls or perhaps due to the insulation itself. If that is the case, I can't imagine how one would get rid of the odor short of getting rid of the refrigerator.
Once I had a stinking fridge. It would stink even with the door shut. Someone had spilt some milk which had run out of the drain at the back of the fridge and it collected in the plastic tray which is located on the back of the fridge on top of the compressor where it would stay nice and warm. Water condensed inside the fridge would be regularly channelled through the drain and into the plastic tray, to prevent the mouldy stuff from dehydrating and dieing. After a few weeks it was fairly smelly.
There's still a lot to look at here. Most modern refrigerators have a sort of plumbing system that channels water (generated by the defrost cycle) away and to a structure that allows it to evaporate.
Unplug the power (don't just turn the fridge off) before trying any of these.
There might be some area where the drain has become plugged and is not letting water get away. Given enough hot/cold cycles, it could really turn nasty and stinky. If you can get at the lines and channels that are supposed to take this water away, pour boiling (or at least very hot) water down them. This can flush out a clog in the lines. Be careful, however, as this could cause parts to melt or swell.
Also look in the fan ducting. Maybe something got spilled or leaked into that area.
Smells can also hide underneath the plastic "skin", as it isn't always a solid piece. Sometimes it happens that something gets spilled and leaks down underneath the points where the plastic comes together. I've never had to deal with this kind of a problem, but I have seen it happen and I don't think it would be fun to fix it.
ElectronDepot website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here.
All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.