Scenario… Wife comes back from making a sandwich in the kitchen… Snuggles up and asks “Honey why is there a light in the refrigerator but not in the freezer??”…
Blank stare…I dunno but I bet I can find out!!
Any answers folks??
Scenario… Wife comes back from making a sandwich in the kitchen… Snuggles up and asks “Honey why is there a light in the refrigerator but not in the freezer??”…
Blank stare…I dunno but I bet I can find out!!
Any answers folks??
Hmm. Can a regular light work in sub-zero (Celcius) temperatures?
Well, that’s a dumb answer. Of course they can. BUT: can really small ones pull it off? Is there a moisture problem with all the possible ice?
My guesses:
My freezer has one. It’s covered by a translucent piece of plastic.
I would guess because:
a) The freezer is usually opened less frequently than the refrigerator, so why bother?
b) The freezer is so little, you don’t need a light to see everything.
Since this is MPSIMS anyway - I think the question is “Why is there a light in the fridge?”
The fridge is likely to have snacks and drinks that you might want late at night or when you’ve got a movie going and you don’t want to turn lights on. Said items don’t need any preparation, so all you need is enough light to find them.
Items in the freezer, however, will always need some kind of preparation, so you will (probably) always have a room light on when you are getting stuff out of the freezer. This wouldn’t hold true for ice, but almost all fridges have an ice dispenser - which is lighted (at least mine is).
Zyada - You obviously are not an officianodo of such things as frozen snickers, frozen kisses, frozen chocolate chip cookies, etc… they need no prep.
As for the OP, I can only speculate:
The heat from the light is of more concern in the freezer than the fridge.
Freezers were at one time just a part of the fridge, and when moved to a different compartment the light just wasn’t moved with it.
Freezer space is cramped already, so why take up extra room with a light?
The reason I really think:
The bulb will heat up quickly if the freezer door is left ajar for any length of time. This will cause moisture to form on the bulb. When the freezer is closed again and the bulb is frozen once more, the bulb will likely break due to the stresses. It was easier to just not to put a bulb in there than to 1) find a bulb that could withstand the stresses or 2) design a system with the added expense.
::opens freezer door::
::stares at ice cream and other ice cream and yet more ice cream::
well, OK, so there are a couple frozen chickens and pork chops in the back…
Ok, I’ll buy the frozen snickers. But wouldn’t you need a bowl and a scoop for the ice cream?
No?
Today’s side-by-side refrigerator/freezers almost always have a light in the freezer half.
Hehe, Walloon. I was just about to ask what the hell people were talking about. We’ve had side-by-sides my entire life and I don’t think I’ve ever even seen a freezer that didn’t have a light.
jayjay
Mine is an ancient “upside down fridge” – the freezer compartment sits below the fridge part. Both sections have a light.
Nah, just a spoon!
Well, the side-by-side freezers generally have more room than the ones above the fridge, right? So they’d need a light. But the smaller areas - as said above - wouldn’t need one, since you can pretty much see everything rather easily.
The bulb in the freezer burnt out and has to be replaced?
Haj
Zyada So if you think ice cream requires prep, what in a fridge doesn’t? Surely most things in your fridge will usually require just as much (or little) prep as ice cream, no?
Years ago, the light in our ancient refrigerator burned out and we couldn’t find a replacement. We lived without a refrigerator light for over 5 years, and it was incredibly difficult to maneuver in there. We ended up storing most of the food to the fronts of the shelves, since you just couldn’t see what was farther back. The freezer, on the other hand, was fairly visible, because it was smaller.
I’m with hajaro. Are you the first owners of this fridge? Is it possible that you just never realized that there is a light bulb behind that pale plastic strip at the back near the controls?