Why is the refrigerator warm while the freezer still freezes hard?
That split points away from the compressor and toward the refrigerator side alone — most often its evaporator fan, sometimes a thermistor reporting falsely. On later built-ins each compartment runs its own cooling circuit, so one side can fail while its neighbor works untroubled. It is among the most common calls we take, and among the most repairable.
Can San Marco humidity alone keep a Sub-Zero from holding 38°F?
Not alone, but it conspires. Year-round humidity hardens and swells door gaskets, and a gasket that no longer seats lets moist air pour in faster than the sealed system can dry and chill it. The unit runs endlessly, frost gathers where it should not, and the box drifts warm. Gasket work sits in the moderate lane — roughly $300 to $700 — and buys back years.
How quickly does food become a concern once cooling stops?
A loaded, closed Sub-Zero coasts remarkably well — the insulation that makes these cabinets heavy also makes them patient. You generally have the better part of a day before refrigerated food crosses into doubtful territory, longer for the freezer. Keep the doors shut, note any codes on the display, and use the time to book rather than to empty shelves into coolers.
At twenty years old, does a warm Sub-Zero still justify repair?
In this neighborhood, usually. The arithmetic that decides it is not the appliance alone but the millwork around it — replacing an integrated unit set into 1920s cabinetry costs far more than the appliance itself. Even substantial sealed-system work at $1,500–$3,000 compares gently against replacement paths that begin near five figures once carpentry enters the bill.
How do I tell a dirty condenser from a failed evaporator fan without opening anything?
Listen and feel. A starved condenser makes both compartments drift warm together while the unit runs constantly, and the kick grille and floor in front of it feel hot. A failed evaporator fan leaves the freezer faithful while only the refrigerator climbs, and the cabinet runs eerily quiet behind the rear panel. The first is a $250–$550 cleaning; the second a $300–$650 motor — and the split between compartments is the tell that separates them.
My Sub-Zero cools but cycles on and off far more often than it used to — is that a not-cooling fault?
It is the early form of one. Short-cycling usually means the compressor is restarting against head pressure it should not be facing — most often a condenser losing its ability to shed heat, sometimes a failing start relay. Caught now it is a cleaning or a relay; ignored, the strain shortens the compressor and moves the bill toward sealed-system territory. Note how many minutes pass between cycles when you book.
Does San Marco humidity make a not-cooling Sub-Zero worse than the same fault elsewhere?
Yes, measurably. Year-round humidity off the river loads more moisture into every door opening, so a unit already struggling — a slow fan, a tired gasket, a coil overdue for cleaning — frosts faster and drifts warmer here than the identical fault would in a drier climate. The fault is the same; the margin for error is thinner, which is why we treat the gasket and condenser as part of every not-cooling diagnosis.