Hi lemmings!

Moving into a new flat soon and will need to buy both fridge and freezer preferably in one combined unit. Been looking at the side-by-side ones. Anyways Ive got little to no knowledge about fridges and freezers and was wondering if there are any typical “gotchas” to look out for?

I am based on the EU and would prefer to buy from an EU brand too. Any recommendations or tips are plenty welcome!

Thanks as always ☺️

  • Valmond@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’ve always went with the freezer compartment below, and the fridge “on top”.

    It’s just so much more convenient.

    Also, go with ventilated cold if you can, there is zero ice buildup and no “cold corners” (like you find out the salad just froze in the fridge because it was stuck against one of the cold walls) with that system.

    Good luck!

  • BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I had one with a bottom freezer and also a side by side and hated them both. A traditional top door freezer really is the best.

  • be_gt@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Hi, the main thing to look out for is that the two compartments should have separate temperature controls. As for brands, well I like Electrolux but it really depends on where in the EU you are to really get a local one.

  • aramis87@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    Don’t get an in-door ice maker. If you have to have an ice maker, have it internal to the unit.

    Check out what maintenance you need to do before you buy it, and how easy the maintenance will be given the space you’re putting the unit into. Like, if it’s a tight fit and surrounded on three sides, cleaning the coils might be problematic, etc.

    • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      Second the door ice maker. We got a Samsung, which everyone will tell you is shit but my wife needs her aesthetics and perfectly matching everything. But my requirement in return was we got an ice maker internal to the freezer that we connected to a reverse osmosis filter. It’s been great for us so far for 7 years.

      Now, my Samsung dishwashers (yes, plural) have been hot garbage. Even paying for top of the line shit they both needed major work or repairman ~ once a year, and obviously a replacement.

  • RandomUser@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Size: height depth width… Can be easy to miss one dimension. Energy rating - obvious reasons Noise depending on the room it’s in Ergonomics - can you reach all the bits you need to… Imagine filling it with your weekly shop. - better energy rating=more insulation=less space. Doors can generally be reversed, but check. Some FFs have two compressor circuits, others only one. Can be important if keeping it in a garage. Do you need a water cooler/ice maker thing? More to clean, more to go wrong. YOUR FRIDGE DOES NOT NEED AN INTERNET CONNECTION Nor does it need funky windows & stuff Self defrost is a must. We spent ages discussing colour, now you can barely see it behind pictures & papers etc.

    Think " is this a useful feature for me, or is it marketing fluff? "

    Finally, while a fridge should be a long term purchase, is just a box that gets cold. Don’t lose sleep over it.

  • floo@retrolemmy.com
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    2 months ago

    Having spent a year selling appliances at Home Depot, I will rank the following brands of refrigerator in order of quality. Beyond that, it really just comes down to features.

    • LG - they used to have a lot of problems with their compressors, but they solve that a couple of years ago. They make honestly the best refrigerators for the money. They come in some cool designs.

    • GE - if LG is the “modern look”, then GE is the “traditional look“. That’s not to say that GE doesn’t make very lovely refrigerators – – they do. And they are very high-quality as well. However, unlike LG, the lower end GE refrigerators aren’t as high in quality as the lower and LG refrigerators.

    • Samsung - some of the most pretty most expensive most feature filled refrigerators. And they’re absolute fucking garbage. You’ll own it for two or three years before something. Major goes wrong. Within five years you’ll have to replace it. And, again, they cost, hundreds, even thousands of dollars, more than their competitors. Avoid Samsung appliances at all costs.

  • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Small thing, but if you’re torn between two or more choices look and see if one uses accessible screws to attach handles. Mine are kind of snap on and one of them is loose. I’m thinking I have a 30% chance of breaking something plastic during removal and having to buy a completely new handle.

  • protist@mander.xyz
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    2 months ago

    We switched from side-by-side to a pullout drawer freezer on bottom and could not be happier. Side-by-side really limits your storage space, whereas top and bottom units allow you to store larger or unusually shaped things. And having the freezer in a drawer is clutch, way better than having it on top

    • Almonds@mander.xyz
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      2 months ago

      I absolutely hate my side-by-side. Can’t fit a frozen pizza, the veggie drawers can barely hold a few days worth of vegetables. Had to move my water pitcher to a shelf because the door shelves are so small, but that also meant taking a shelf out of the fridge.

      I’m getting the same style you have, and I’m super excited lol

  • JimmyChanga@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Frost free freezer, it’s a pain in the arse defrosting. You do lose a tiny bit of capacity but it’s a trade off with making imo

  • Willy@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    The classic ones with the freezer on top are the most reliable but the hardest to deal with as you age as youll have to squat. they will all fail though. if your flat has room get a chest freezer and use fridge separately do that. check out technology connections on YouTube for some good general advice.

    • arandomthought@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Absolutely. The short version: Chest freerzers are way more efficient because the cold air doesn’t “fall out” as soon as you open them.

  • estutweh@aussie.zone
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    2 months ago

    Not a Samsung. My wife used to be a big fan, but the last two brand new Samsung fridges broke within weeks, and their product support was terrible.

    (Our current fridge is LG and we haven’t had any problems with it. There are probably other brands that are also reliable and well built).

    • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Just be aware, LG’s linear compressors (ie. the ones that claim a 10yr warranty) are prone to failure; ours crapped out after ~3 years and was deemed uneconomical to repair.

      Thankfully we have pretty strong consumer protections in Australia (and I expect similar, or better in the EU for OP); so we ended up getting a full refund from the retailer which we ended up putting towards a Hitachi model, after way too much research.

      • estutweh@aussie.zone
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        2 months ago

        Thanks, we’re coming up on three years for this fridge, so now I know what to expect. (Also in Australia). We bought this particular fridge not because of brand, but because we’re renting and the kitchen has a stupid cutout space between cabinets and this is the only fridge that fits.

        • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          We’re likely in a similar boat, due to the size of our fridge nook. We had the LG 530L French Door Fridge Stainless Steel GF-B505PL previously, that the compressor failed in.

          I’d you aren’t already, you should be pulling the fridge out every six months or so and cleaning behind it to keep the compressor free from dust bunnies.

          We managed to just squeeze in a Hitachi 638L 4 Door French Door Fridge in the same space, even though it juts out by ~10cm - the added 100L capacity (and bonus unplumbed ice maker) was worth the trade-off.

            • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Yeah, that’s basically it - there’s a small removable filter/container in between the two vegetable drawers that you fill up with water.

              It then pumps the water into an ice tray in the freezer, and dispenses ice into a tray every few hours.

              Edit - it looks like this:

          • estutweh@aussie.zone
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            2 months ago

            I’d you aren’t already, you should be pulling the fridge out every six months or so and cleaning behind it to keep the compressor free from dust bunnies.

            Thanks, appreciate that.

  • HikingVet@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Get one with as few chips and features outside of it making things cold. The dumber your fridge/freezer the less problems you’ll have.

    I prefer an under fridge drawer style frezzer. I find it easier to use and less likely to have to chase a frozen whatever across the kitchen.

    Stainless or white smooth finishes can work as a whiteboard for DRY ERASE markers.