Many years ago we bought a giant freezer. We found that you could get an even bigger super-giant freezer if you skipped the self-defrost feature. So we did that.
Big mistake. Defrosting this thing is a real pain, so we seldom do it, which means it frosts up even more. It looks like Antarctica in there, with huge frozen mountains of ice. Our super-giant freezer is functionally a super-small freezer due to the ice buildup.
Besides simply replacing the freezer, is there anything that can be done to help with the frost buildup? Would putting a dehydrator (one of those desiccant-filled things like you might have in a gun safe) help any? Or would that just serve to desiccate your food as well?
We're in Colorado, and our climate is arid here. So I'm wondering where this freezer is getting all the moisture from to build it's magnificent internal ice sculptures.
Big mistake. Defrosting this thing is a real pain, so we seldom do it, which means it frosts up even more. It looks like Antarctica in there, with huge frozen mountains of ice. Our super-giant freezer is functionally a super-small freezer due to the ice buildup.
Besides simply replacing the freezer, is there anything that can be done to help with the frost buildup? Would putting a dehydrator (one of those desiccant-filled things like you might have in a gun safe) help any? Or would that just serve to desiccate your food as well?
We're in Colorado, and our climate is arid here. So I'm wondering where this freezer is getting all the moisture from to build it's magnificent internal ice sculptures.