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Preventing Floor Damage Due to Refrigerator

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Preventing Floor Damage Due to Refrigerator seglie 01-18-2007
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Posted by on January 18, 2007, 2:38 pm


Hello,
Just purchased my first house and it has beautiful wood floors in the
kitchen. This concerns me a little when it comes to refrigerator
leaks. I know there are drip pans in the refrigerator but have read
that leaking is still a common problem due to various issues. Just
wondering if there was a solution in laying something down underneath
the refrigerator just in case there was external leaking? Maybe some
sort of thin plastic mat or similar? A new refrigerator is being
delivered at the end of this month and wanted to have something in
place just in case.

Thanks!


Posted by Bewildered on January 18, 2007, 2:43 pm



> Hello,
> Just purchased my first house and it has beautiful wood floors in the
> kitchen. This concerns me a little when it comes to refrigerator
> leaks. I know there are drip pans in the refrigerator but have read
> that leaking is still a common problem due to various issues. Just
> wondering if there was a solution in laying something down underneath
> the refrigerator just in case there was external leaking? Maybe some
> sort of thin plastic mat or similar? A new refrigerator is being
> delivered at the end of this month and wanted to have something in
> place just in case.
>
I don't have a solution, but don't let anyone tell you it isn't a problem.
My floor is messed up in front of the fridge and the dishwasher.
> Thanks!
>



Posted by BobK207 on January 18, 2007, 3:02 pm



Bewildered wrote:
> > Hello,
> > Just purchased my first house and it has beautiful wood floors in the
> > kitchen. This concerns me a little when it comes to refrigerator
> > leaks. I know there are drip pans in the refrigerator but have read
> > that leaking is still a common problem due to various issues. Just
> > wondering if there was a solution in laying something down underneath
> > the refrigerator just in case there was external leaking? Maybe some
> > sort of thin plastic mat or similar? A new refrigerator is being
> > delivered at the end of this month and wanted to have something in
> > place just in case.
> >
> I don't have a solution, but don't let anyone tell you it isn't a problem.
> My floor is messed up in front of the fridge and the dishwasher.
> > Thanks!
> >


>>>>>but don't let anyone tell you it isn't a problem.
My floor is messed up in front of the fridge and the dishwasher. <<<<<,

I was going to say don't worry since my mom's house has had oak
flooring in the kitchen for ~20 years. And my kitchen has had oak for
10 years....only moisture problem is near the outside slider....finish
has taken beating from water

Maybe the moisture trouble is geographic location specific?

no moisture problems but high heels sure have take a toll........

cheers
Bob


Posted by mm on January 21, 2007, 12:28 pm



>
>Bewildered wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> > Just purchased my first house and it has beautiful wood floors in the
>> > kitchen. This concerns me a little when it comes to refrigerator
>> > leaks.

I have never had floor problems under the fridge, but nonetheless, I
would say that one never sees the floor under the fridge, and no one
ever moves the fridge to another location, so I would just let nature
and mechanics take their course.

OTOH, I WOULD CONSIDER putting a dike under the fridge so that leaks
from the part you can't see don't spread to places you can see.

I would most likely use silicone sealant, to build a levee in a square
such that it couldn't be seen by anyone standing or sitting on a
chair, and wouldn't be destroyed by the wheels when the fridge is put
in or moved out, but surrounded any part from which water might drip.

I did this in my car once when the convertible top let water run down
the metal sheet behind the back of the rear seat. I drilled a whole
at each corner, and built a wall with silicone in layers until it was
about 3/4 of an inch high. I think you could get buy on a quarter
inch. You would benefit from a way to see if there was water in the
lake bed you create.

**I think they used to call this silicone cement, when sold in 4 oz.
tubes, but I've found if one uses the cap and the tapes the camp shut
well, partly used tubes will stay good at least 6 months.

MORE below.

>> I don't have a solution, but don't let anyone tell you it isn't a problem.
>> My floor is messed up in front of the fridge and the dishwasher.
>> > Thanks!
>> >
>>>>>>but don't let anyone tell you it isn't a problem.
>My floor is messed up in front of the fridge and the dishwasher. <<<<<,
>
>I was going to say don't worry since my mom's house has had oak
>flooring in the kitchen for ~20 years. And my kitchen has had oak for
>10 years....only moisture problem is near the outside slider....finish
>has taken beating from water
>
>Maybe the moisture trouble is geographic location specific?
>
>no moisture problems but high heels sure have take a toll........

I used to go to receptions weekly at a place that used, I'm sure,
commmercial grade tile, 12 inch squares. When looking from the right
angle, with the light behind the floor, where the reception lines were
one could see 100's of dents from high heels. By this time it must
have been hard even to stand there in such shoes.

>cheers
>Bob


Posted by Banty on January 21, 2007, 2:34 pm


>
>
>>
>>Bewildered wrote:
>>> > Hello,
>>> > Just purchased my first house and it has beautiful wood floors in the
>>> > kitchen. This concerns me a little when it comes to refrigerator
>>> > leaks.
>
>I have never had floor problems under the fridge, but nonetheless, I
>would say that one never sees the floor under the fridge, and no one
>ever moves the fridge to another location, so I would just let nature
>and mechanics take their course.

Best thing: rip up the damn sticks - they don't belong in the kitchen, and put
in a nice tile floor.

Well, that's *my* opinion :-)

This trend is going the way of carpet in the bathrooms. (Remember that?)

Banty


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