Perspectives sur le propane

Comment fonctionne un réfrigérateur au propane ? Guide complet pour les propriétaires

Propane refrigerators are the practical choice when you want a fridge that keeps running through power outages without skipping a beat. The core technology has been around since the 1920s and hasn’t changed much, which tells you something about how reliable it is. 

Propane Fridge
Propane refrigerators are the practical choice when you want a fridge that keeps running through power outages without skipping a beat. The core technology has been around since the 1920s and hasn’t changed much, which tells you something about how reliable it is.We deliver propane to properties across Canada, including a lot of remote cottages and seasonal retreats where all or most of the appliances run on propane. Propane fridges are one of the most common appliances we encounter at these properties, and the first thing most people find surprising: a propane refrigerator uses heat to create cold. There’s no compressor, no electrical connection required, and almost no moving parts. The cooling happens entirely through a chemical cycle driven by a small propane flame – the same fuel that’s running your furnace or water heater.The questions we get most often are how they actually work, how to keep them running through the season, and what to do when they stop cooling. This post covers all three. 

If you’re setting up a cottage or off-grid property and want to sort out propane delivery for the season at the same time, we can help with that.

What Is a Propane Refrigerator?

A propane refrigerator is a gas-powered appliance that cools its interior using heat from a propane burner rather than electricity. The cooling process is called absorption refrigeration, and it relies on a sealed system containing three substances: ammonia, water, and hydrogen gas. None of these substances leave the system – the cycle runs continuously and the chemicals just change form and location as the process repeats.

The comparison with a standard electric fridge is worth spelling out. An electric compressor fridge uses a motor-driven compressor to compress and expand a refrigerant, moving heat from inside the cabinet to outside it. The compressor is what hums – and the part that eventually fails. A propane fridge replaces the compressor with heat. The ammonia-water-hydrogen system does the same job – moves heat out of the cabinet – but without mechanical compression and without electricity. If you’re already running a furnace, water heater, or range on propane at a remote property, a propane fridge fits into the same residential propane setup without adding another fuel type to manage.

The practical result: propane fridges are essentially silent, have very few parts that can break, and will run as long as the propane supply holds.

The Absorption Refrigerator Propane System Explained

The absorption cycle has four stages. Each one feeds into the next, and the cycle runs continuously while the burner is on. The whole process happens inside a sealed network of tubes and chambers welded into the back of the unit.

Step 1: Propane Burner Creates Heat

A small propane flame at the base of the unit heats a mixture of ammonia dissolved in water, stored in the generator. The heat causes the ammonia to boil off and separate from the water as a hot gas. This is the starting point of every cycle – heat goes in, and cooling follows as a consequence.

Step 2: Condensation

The ammonia gas rises through condenser coils on the back of the fridge. As it moves through the coils and loses heat to the surrounding air, it cools and condenses back into liquid ammonia. This is why the back of a propane fridge gets warm – it’s releasing the heat the ammonia collected.

Step 3: Evaporation and Cooling

Liquid ammonia flows into the evaporator, which sits inside the refrigerator compartment. Here it mixes with hydrogen gas. In the presence of hydrogen, ammonia evaporates at a much lower temperature than it normally would. Evaporation pulls heat from its surroundings – from inside the fridge – to fuel itself. The temperature inside the cabinet drops because the ammonia-hydrogen mixture is actively drawing heat out of that space. This is the stage where the actual cooling occurs.

Step 4: Absorption and Cycle Reset

The ammonia gas, now carrying heat it absorbed from inside the fridge, flows into the absorber and dissolves back into the water. The water releases the hydrogen gas, which returns to the evaporator. The ammonia-water mixture flows back to the generator to begin the cycle again. The loop runs continuously with no pump, no compressor, and no external intervention.

Why Propane Fridges Are Popular in Canada

Le Association canadienne du propane identifies propane refrigerators as a practical solution for off-grid homes and cottages, particularly because they continue operating independent of the electrical grid. For a seasonal property in a remote area, that reliability is the whole point.

A few reasons they’re a standard choice for remote and off-grid properties:

  • No grid connection required. The fridge runs entirely on the propane supply. If a property is already running a furnace, water heater, or range on propane, the same tank and delivery setup runs the fridge.
  • Runs through outages. Grid power is less reliable in rural and remote areas. A propane fridge keeps food cold regardless of what the power company is doing.
  • Silent operation. No compressor means no motor cycling on and off. At a cabin where ambient noise actually registers, this makes a real difference.
  • Long runtime on a single tank. A propane fridge uses roughly 1 to 1.5 lbs of propane per day under normal conditions. On a standard residential tank, that’s approximately two to three months of continuous runtime.
  • Performs in cold ambient temperatures. Electric fridges have trouble cycling properly in unheated spaces – if the room temperature drops near the fridge’s thermostat setting, the compressor stops running. Propane fridges aren’t affected the same way, which matters in a cabin that isn’t heated constantly.

Typical applications: remote cottages, hunting and fishing cabins, tiny homes, off-grid homesteads, boats and marine applications, and residential properties where extending grid power would cost more than the alternative.

Installation Requirements for Propane Refrigerators

Three things have to be right for it to work safely and cool properly:

  • Levelling is critical. This is the single most common reason a propane fridge stops cooling and the one homeowners most often overlook. If the fridge is more than a few degrees off level – front-to-back or side-to-side – the fluid circulation breaks down and the cooling cycle stalls. The burner fires, the propane burns, but the interior warms up. Use a bubble level and shim the feet until the unit is plumb in both axes before assuming anything else is wrong. 
  • Ventilation clearances. The burner needs a supply of fresh air to combust completely, and the condenser coils need airflow to release heat to the surrounding environment. Both requirements mean clearances around the unit – and in most cabin installations, external venting through the wall or ceiling behind the fridge. An absorption fridge installed in an enclosed cabinet or closet without proper air circulation will underperform, produce incomplete combustion, and create a carbon monoxide risk. 
  • Licensed gas connections. Gas line hookups in Canada must be made by a licensed gas fitter. This applies to propane fridges exactly as it does to furnaces and water heaters – the connection has to be done right and pressure-tested before the appliance runs. Our équipe d'installation d'équipement handles propane appliance hookups at remote and seasonal properties.

Ventilation and Carbon Monoxide Safety

CO is colourless and odourless – you cannot detect it without a detector. The Canadian Propane Association’s guidance on carbon monoxide is clear: any fuel-burning appliance that isn’t properly vented or maintained is a CO risk. A propane fridge with a blocked flue, inadequate fresh air, or a dirty burner can produce CO in the space where it’s installed. 

Requirements:

  • Install CO detectors on every level of any property where propane appliances are running. Test them every six months. Replace them on schedule – detectors have a rated lifespan and don’t last forever.
  • Never block the ventilation openings at the back or top of the fridge. The condenser needs airflow to release heat. Stored items, extra insulation, and wall framing too close to the unit are all common culprits.
  • Check the exhaust flue before opening a cottage that’s been closed all winter. Insects and rodents can build nests inside a flue over several months. A blocked flue means combustion gases vent into the living space instead of outside.

Propane Fridge Troubleshooting Tips

Burner Flame Looks Yellow or Orange

The flame on a properly adjusted propane burner should be steady and blue. Yellow or orange in the flame indicates incomplete combustion – the burner may be dirty, corroded, or getting the wrong air-to-gas ratio. Don’t leave a yellow-flaming burner running. Incomplete combustion produces CO. Have a technician clean and adjust the burner before the appliance goes back into service.

Fridge Not Cooling

Before calling for service, work through this list:

  1. Is the fridge level? Put a bubble level on the interior shelf – check front-to-back and side-to-side. Even a small tilt disrupts the fluid circulation. Shim the feet, then give the fridge 6 to 8 hours to stabilize before drawing any conclusions.
  2. Is the burner running? On pilot light models, confirm the pilot is lit. On electronic ignition models, check for fault indicators on the control panel.
  3. Is the ventilation clear? Make sure nothing is blocking the air intakes or condenser area.
  4. Did you just start the fridge? A cold start on a warm day takes 6 to 8 hours to reach operating temperature. Don’t load it with food right away and don’t assume it’s broken because it isn’t cold yet after an hour.
  5. How full is the propane tank? Check the gauge. A fridge that was cooling fine and then stopped is often just out of fuel. Many propane companies do not proactively monitor tank levels, which means you can run out unexpectedly. Avenir offers wireless tank monitoring options so you get ahead of refills and keep your fridge running.

Propane Smell or Suspected Leak

The rotten-egg smell in propane is mercaptan, an additive that makes leaks immediately detectable. If you smell it near the fridge or anywhere in the cabin:

  1. Don’t touch any switches, lights, or appliances.
  2. Shut off the propane supply at the tank valve on your way out if you can do so safely.
  3. Open windows and doors as you leave to start clearing the space.
  4. Stay out and contact us or call your local emergency line for a technician to inspect and clear the system before you re-enter.

Schedule Your Propane Installation for Reliable Fridge Cooling

If you’re setting up propane service for a cottage or remote property – fridge, furnace, water heater, or all of the above – request a quote from the Avenir branch nearest you directement.

Comment surveiller le niveau de votre réservoir de propane

Chaque bonbonne de propane est équipée d'un indicateur à flotteur sur le dessus, semblable à une jauge à carburant de voiture. L'aiguille se déplace en fonction du niveau de liquide et affiche une indication approximative en pourcentage. C'est suffisant pour une vérification rapide et cela vous avertit lorsque vous approchez du point de réapprovisionnement du réservoir 30%.

Le principal inconvénient est que la vérification nécessite de sortir. En février au Canada, avec la cuve située au fond du terrain, sous soixante centimètres de neige, cela a son importance. De plus, la jauge ne signale pas le dépassement d'un seuil critique.

C’est pourquoi Avenir Energy inclut la surveillance sans fil des réservoirs avec les comptes de livraison automatique. Un capteur installé sur votre réservoir transmet en temps réel les niveaux à notre système, 24 h/24 et 7 j/7. Lorsque votre niveau atteint le seuil de réapprovisionnement, nous programmons un remplissage avant que votre réservoir ne soit presque vide, sans aucune intervention de votre part. Vous pouvez également consulter votre niveau via votre compte. Compte en ligne Avenir.

Pour les propriétaires de résidences saisonnières, c'est particulièrement utile car vous pouvez vérifier le niveau de votre réservoir d'eau depuis votre téléphone avant de partir en week-end, plutôt que de constater sur place que le niveau est bas. 

Prêt pour une citerne de propane ? Demandez un devis

Si vous êtes prêt à mettre en place un service de propane – installation d'une nouvelle citerne, planification des livraisons ou ajout d'appareils à un système existant – demandez un devis et nous établirons un plan pour votre propriété. 

Connectez-vous avec Avenir le plus proche de chez vous directement.

Questions fréquentes sur les réservoirs de propane

What Are Common Problems With Propane Refrigerators?

The most common issue is the fridge not cooling properly, which is almost always caused by the unit being slightly off level. Because absorption fridges rely on gravity to circulate fluids, even a small tilt can stall the cooling cycle. The fix is simple: use a bubble level and shim the feet. Beyond that, a dirty burner or blocked ventilation can reduce performance. The upside is that propane fridges have almost no moving parts, so there’s far less that can break compared to an electric compressor fridge.

Do Propane Refrigerators Use a Lot of Propane?

No. A standard propane fridge uses approximately 1 to 1.5 lbs of propane per day. For a property already running heating and hot water on propane, the fridge adds only a small fraction to overall fuel consumption. It’s one of the most efficient propane appliances you can own.

Can a Propane Refrigerator Run Without Electricity?

Yes — that’s one of the main reasons people choose them. A propane fridge runs entirely on propane fuel with no electrical connection required. The absorption cooling cycle is powered by a small propane flame, not a motor or compressor. This makes propane fridges ideal for off-grid cabins, remote cottages, and any property where grid power is unavailable or unreliable. When the power goes out, your propane fridge keeps running.

Are Propane Fridges Worth It?

For off-grid and remote properties, they’re often the only practical option — and a good one. Propane fridges are silent, have very few parts that can fail, and operate independently of the electrical grid. If your property already runs on propane for heating and hot water, a propane fridge fits into the same supply and delivery setup with no additional infrastructure.

How Much Does It Cost to Run a Propane Fridge 24 Hours a Day?

Expect $1.70-$2.60 CAD daily (or $51-$78 monthly) at typical 1-1.5 lbs/day consumption. Costs vary by region, season, and bulk deals.

How Long Does It Take for a Propane Fridge to Get Cold?

How long does it take for a propane fridge to get cold? It typically requires 6-24 hours (often 8-12) on a cold start to reach safe operating temperatures, depending on unit size and ambient conditions—much slower than electric models. Wait until fully cooled before adding food to ensure efficiency.

Can My Propane Fridge Run Out of Fuel While I’m Away?

When you don’t have a proper monitoring system, it can happen, and it’s one of the most common issues with seasonal properties. If the propane tank runs low while you’re away, the fridge shuts off, food spoils, and you don’t find out until you arrive. Avenir Energy’s automatic delivery accounts include wireless tank monitoring that solves this: a sensor on your tank tracks the level in real time and triggers a delivery before it drops too low, even if you haven’t visited in weeks. You can also check your level from anywhere through your Avenir online account or the Nee-Vo app — useful when you want to confirm everything is running before heading up for the weekend.

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Fournisseur local de propane au Canada pour la livraison et les recharges

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