the room will warm up, the "cold" is created by moving "heat" to the coils. unless the fridge is a perpetual motion machine, the heat created will be greater than the cold created and the room will warm up.
2006-11-02 20:00:11
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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When the door is closed the refrigerator moves heat from inside to the outside, so the area inside the refrigerator in maintained at a low temperature.
If we open the door, then for a brief period of time the temperature of the room area in front of the open door will decrease, but eventually the temperature in the room will rise, since the heat produced by the engine of the refrigerator (which, by the way, increases compared to when the door is closed, since we 're overworking the fridge) adds up to the heat already in the room.
So, the bottom line is
YOU CAN'T USE YOUR FRIDGE AS AN AIR-CONDITION!
2006-11-03 04:39:33
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answer #2
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answered by fanis t 2
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What will happen is the refrigerator's engine will be destroyed. Refrigerators operate on efficiently on a small temperature difference, with the door open, the room's temperature will cause a big change in temperature, thus overworking the engine, that is unless the room is already insulated and chilled to a temperature near the refrigerator
2006-11-03 03:58:35
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answer #3
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answered by bloop87 4
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Refrigerator door will open forcefully because air is present inside the fridge. but not outside it. so the door will open and swing very forcefully. (the Refrigerator may get destroyed. so don't do this).
2006-11-04 02:52:26
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answer #4
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answered by Amandeep 1
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Temperature rises slowly
2006-11-03 03:59:24
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answer #5
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answered by VIDYADHARA B 2
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why don't you try and tell me
2006-11-03 04:43:31
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answer #6
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answered by Daisies 2
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As I said...............
2006-11-03 04:00:48
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answer #7
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answered by ag_iitkgp 7
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