Quote:
Whats the safety difference between a stand up freezer laying on its back an a chest type freezer. None have latched in years. The danger was stand up fridges with latching handles, very few still around. All new ones can only be locked with a key from the out side.
That's what I was thinking. Those old (and really cool-looking, IMO) refrigerators had silver chrome handles that actually latched shut to hold the door closed.
Nowadays, they're so easy to open that I've had things fall over in the 'fridge (like a watermelon), bang against the door, and knock it open! When I was brining my Thanksgiving turkey in the downstair 'fridge last month, I actually put a brace against the door to hold it closed, just in case something shifted inside!
Whats the safety difference between a stand up freezer laying on its back an a chest type freezer. None have latched in years. The danger was stand up fridges with latching handles, very few still around. All new ones can only be locked with a key from the out side.
That's what I was thinking. Those old (and really cool-looking, IMO) refrigerators had silver chrome handles that actually latched shut to hold the door closed.
Nowadays, they're so easy to open that I've had things fall over in the 'fridge (like a watermelon), bang against the door, and knock it open! When I was brining my Thanksgiving turkey in the downstair 'fridge last month, I actually put a brace against the door to hold it closed, just in case something shifted inside!
