Excessive ice buildup in a walk-in freezer is one of the most common commercial refrigeration problems we see at Texas HVACR Pros. While some frost is normal in a freezer environment, heavy ice accumulation on the evaporator coil, walls, floor, or ceiling is a sign that something is wrong.
This is the most common cause of excessive ice buildup. Walk-in freezers have a defrost cycle that runs several times per day to melt frost accumulation off the evaporator coil. This cycle is controlled by a defrost timer, defrost heater, and defrost termination thermostat. If any of these components fail, the defrost cycle stops running and ice accumulates rapidly. Signs include heavy frost completely encasing the evaporator coil and the freezer struggling to maintain temperature despite running constantly.
Every time warm, humid air enters your walk-in freezer, moisture condenses and freezes. A leaking door gasket or a door that is not closing and sealing properly allows a constant infiltration of warm air β which means constant ice formation. Check your door gaskets for cracks, tears, or areas where they are no longer making full contact with the door frame.
Counterintuitively, low refrigerant can cause ice buildup. When refrigerant levels are low, the evaporator coil operates at a lower-than-normal temperature and pressure, which can cause moisture to freeze onto the coil surface more aggressively than normal.
If your walk-in freezer has significant ice buildup, the immediate step is a manual defrost: turn off the refrigeration system and allow the ice to melt with towels ready to manage the water. This restores function temporarily but does not fix the underlying problem. After defrosting, monitor how quickly ice returns β rapid reaccumulation within 24-48 hours confirms a defrost system issue that requires a commercial refrigeration technician.
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