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Preventative maintenance for refrigeration systems is a scheduled routine of cleaning, inspection, and minor service — condenser and evaporator coils, door gaskets, drain lines, refrigerant charge, and electrical connections — that keeps a mortuary cooler running efficiently and prevents costly failures. Done on a regular schedule, it protects holding temperatures, lowers energy use, and extends equipment life by years.
A mortuary cooler protects something irreplaceable, so an unplanned breakdown is never just an inconvenience. Preventative maintenance trades a small amount of routine attention for reliability: clean coils move heat efficiently, tight door seals stop warm-air infiltration, and clear drains prevent water damage. The payoff is steady holding temperatures, lower power bills, and a compressor that lasts. Put simply, preventative maintenance is how a famous brand with a long life stays that way — a well-built cooler, properly maintained, runs dependably for many years.
Use this schedule as a baseline and adjust for your facility’s caseload, climate, and dust levels.
| Frequency | Tasks |
|---|---|
| Daily / Weekly | Verify temperature setpoint; listen for unusual compressor or fan noise; confirm the door closes and seals fully |
| Monthly | Inspect and wipe down door gaskets; check for ice buildup; clear the condensate drain line and pan |
| Quarterly | Clean condenser coils; inspect evaporator coils; check fan motors and blades; tighten visible electrical connections |
| Annually | Professional service: verify refrigerant charge, test controls and safeties, inspect compressor, calibrate the controller |
Dust and lint on the condenser coil force the system to work harder, raising energy use and head pressure. Cleaning the coils on a quarterly schedule (more often in dusty rooms) is the single highest-impact maintenance task. See our dedicated guide on condenser coil cleaning.
The evaporator absorbs heat inside the cooler. Check for frost buildup or restricted airflow, which can signal a defrost or airflow problem and reduce cooling capacity.
A worn or torn gasket lets warm, humid air leak in — driving up run time, energy use, and condensation. Clean gaskets regularly and replace any that are cracked or no longer sealing.
Condensate drains can clog with debris or algae, causing water to back up or pool. Flush the drain line and clean the pan to prevent leaks and odors.
A system low on refrigerant cools poorly and overworks the compressor. Annual professional service confirms the charge and verifies the cooler holds its setpoint. Background on the hardware: compressors & evaporators guide.
Condenser and evaporator fans keep air moving across the coils. Check that blades spin freely and motors run quietly, and make sure electrical connections are tight and corrosion-free.
Call for service if you notice the cooler struggling to hold temperature, longer run times, unusual noise or vibration, ice buildup, water pooling, or a sudden jump in energy use. Catching these early prevents a small issue from becoming a compressor failure.
Questions on maintaining your mortuary refrigeration? Talk to the USA-based team that built it.
Call 1-888-792-9315Perform basic checks weekly and monthly, clean coils quarterly, and schedule professional service annually to verify refrigerant charge, controls, and the compressor.
Cleaning the condenser coils. Dirty coils are the most common cause of high energy use, poor cooling, and premature compressor wear.
Yes. Regular cleaning, seal checks, and annual service keep the system efficient and prevent the failures that shorten equipment life — often adding many years of reliable service.
American Mortuary Coolers — USA-made, factory-direct. 140 Kwickway Lane, Johnson City, TN 37615 • 1-888-792-9315 • po@mymortuarycooler.com