MrFoodScientist
Well-Known Member
So I scored a vintage (I believe 1949) 10cf fridge off of craigslist.
I can fit 3 cornies on the floor, and could likely stagger another 2 if I could find another 1/2" of space.
I was cleaning it up last night and found nasty blackness in the door insulation(hopefully I didn't just invite toxic black mold into my apartment). It's also been seeping water from somewhere around the skirt while it's been unplugged that I assume is condensation that has soaked the cabinet insulation. I can only imagine what's living in there.
I've read other vintage kegerator build threads (Special thanks to kerber for his other advice already via PM) where they've replaced the insulation with R-30 or R-19 insulation.
There's roughly 3 1/2" between the inner cabinet and the outer cabinet, but R-19 insulation is 6 1/2" inches thick and R-30 is 9 1/4". Wouldn't I do just as well to use the R-13 that's 3 1/2" so I don't compress it and lose R-value?
I've never installed insulation before, so I'm not sure how snug the fit should be, but I understand the R-value concept and I know I'm going to lose some of it to compression.
I suppose I could dig up kerber's thread to look at his temperature profile over time and do the math to see what R-value he's getting, but I just wanted to throw that out there to see what the consensus was.
Any thoughts?

I can fit 3 cornies on the floor, and could likely stagger another 2 if I could find another 1/2" of space.
I was cleaning it up last night and found nasty blackness in the door insulation(hopefully I didn't just invite toxic black mold into my apartment). It's also been seeping water from somewhere around the skirt while it's been unplugged that I assume is condensation that has soaked the cabinet insulation. I can only imagine what's living in there.
I've read other vintage kegerator build threads (Special thanks to kerber for his other advice already via PM) where they've replaced the insulation with R-30 or R-19 insulation.
There's roughly 3 1/2" between the inner cabinet and the outer cabinet, but R-19 insulation is 6 1/2" inches thick and R-30 is 9 1/4". Wouldn't I do just as well to use the R-13 that's 3 1/2" so I don't compress it and lose R-value?
I've never installed insulation before, so I'm not sure how snug the fit should be, but I understand the R-value concept and I know I'm going to lose some of it to compression.
I suppose I could dig up kerber's thread to look at his temperature profile over time and do the math to see what R-value he's getting, but I just wanted to throw that out there to see what the consensus was.
Any thoughts?