What is a bottom mount refrigerator?
A bottom-mount refrigerator (also called a bottom freezer refrigerator) keeps the fresh-food section on top and the freezer drawer on the bottom. On Kenmore model 79565012401, this design puts everyday refrigerated items at eye level while frozen foods store below.
Most bottom-mount refrigerators, including Kenmore 79565012401, are set up like this:
- Top compartment: refrigerator section for fresh foods
- Bottom compartment: freezer section (often a pull-out drawer)
- Air circulation: cold air is moved between sections to maintain set temperatures
- Temperature controls: separate settings for refrigerator and freezer (the manual shows an initial target of 37°F for fresh food and 0°F for freezer)
For model-specific features and control settings, use the owner's manual.
This style is popular because it matches how most households use the appliance day to day.
- Less bending to reach fresh foods (milk, produce, leftovers)
- Freezer storage stays separated and contained in the lower drawer
- Wide shelves and door bins make it easier to organize refrigerated groceries
- Works well for families that access the refrigerator more often than the freezer
| Feature | Bottom-mount refrigerator | Top-freezer refrigerator |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh food access | Eye level | Lower shelves require more bending |
| Freezer access | Lower drawer | Eye level |
| Typical use case | Fresh foods used most | Freezer used often |
Understanding the bottom-mount design helps with everyday use and troubleshooting. For example, proper airflow between the freezer and refrigerator sections is essential for stable temperatures, so keeping vents clear and setting controls correctly can prevent uneven cooling.
Last updated: January 2026
What size is Kenmore refrigerator model 79565012401?
Kenmore bottom-mount refrigerator model 79565012401 is part of the Kenmore 795.6500 series covered by the product documentation; for exact exterior dimensions (width, depth, height), we use the measurements listed for your specific color and configuration in the owner's manual.
Use these steps so you get the right fit for a cabinet opening, doorway, or delivery path:
- Check the specifications/dimensions section in the owner's manual.
- Measure width at the widest point (often the doors or hinges).
- Measure depth two ways: cabinet-only and with handles (if equipped).
- Measure height to the top of the hinge cover (not just the cabinet).
- Confirm you have clearance for door swing and drawer pull-out.
Most Kenmore 795-series bottom-mount refrigerators in the 33-inch class fall into a common footprint range:
| Measurement | Typical range (approx.) | What changes it most |
|---|---|---|
| Width | 32 3/4 to 33 inches | hinge caps, door alignment |
| Depth | 30 to 34 inches | handles, door thickness |
| Height | 67 to 70 inches | leveling legs, hinge cover |
A refrigerator that is even 1/2 inch too wide or too tall can bind in the opening, restrict airflow, or prevent doors from closing fully, which can lead to temperature swings and frost buildup.
If you are also seeing a display error while checking fit or moving the unit, use the Kenmore 795 model bottom freezer refrigerator error codes guide to identify what the control is reporting.
Last updated: January 2026
What water filter fits my Kenmore fridge?
For Kenmore model 79565012401, the correct water filter is the one specified for your exact refrigerator configuration (some versions are equipped with a filter and some are not). We match the right cartridge by confirming where the filter mounts and the filter part number listed in the owner's manual.
Use these quick checks before ordering:
- Look for a filter housing in the fresh food compartment (often upper right, upper left, or base grille area).
- Check for a “push button” or “twist” style cartridge mount.
- Confirm you have a water line connected (ice maker and or water dispenser models).
- Note any filter indicator light or reset button on the control panel.
- If no housing is present, your refrigerator is a “no internal filter” setup and uses an external inline filter (optional).
The most reliable places to confirm the filter part number are:
- The filter label on the cartridge currently installed
- The model and parts information section in the owner's manual
- The filter head or housing label near the cartridge mount
| What you find in the refrigerator | What it means | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| A cartridge installed in a filter head | It uses a specific internal filter | Match the printed part number exactly |
| A capped filter head with no cartridge | It is filter-ready | Use the manual to confirm the correct cartridge |
| No filter head anywhere | No internal filter | Consider an inline filter on the water line |
Using the correct filter keeps water flow strong and protects the water inlet valve and ice maker from sediment. The manual also notes that the water supply pressure requirement is higher on models equipped with a water filter, so the right setup helps prevent slow dispensing and small ice cubes.
Last updated: January 2026
How to tell if a Kenmore refrigerator compressor is bad?
On Kenmore model 79565012401, a “bad compressor” is most likely when the refrigerator runs but cannot maintain safe temperatures, especially after you rule out normal long run times and normal operating sounds described in the owner's manual.
- Confirm the controls are not set to OFF.
- Verify the power cord is plugged in and the house breaker is not tripped.
- Listen for the compressor area: a steady hum is normal; repeated clicking with no sustained run often points to a start device or control issue.
- Make sure doors close fully and gaskets seal; air leaks can mimic compressor failure.
- Allow time after loading groceries or frequent door openings; longer run time is expected.
The manual notes that modern, high-efficiency compressors can run longer than older units and may sound pulsating or high-pitched. It also notes that at normal room temperatures, you can expect the motor to run about 40% to 80% of the time, and more in warm conditions.
| What you notice | Often normal | More concerning |
|---|---|---|
| Compressor runs a lot | Hot room, frequent door openings, warm food load | Runs constantly and temps still rise |
| Sounds | Clicking at defrost start/end, gurgling, fan airflow | Loud grinding, repeated clicking with no cooling |
| Cooling performance | Recovers within hours after loading | Never reaches set temps, freezer softens |
If the compressor will not start or it starts and stops quickly, these model-relevant parts are worth checking first:
- Ptc asm 6749C-0008D (compressor start device style component)
- Refrigerator main pcb 6871JB1215J (controls that can affect compressor operation)
- Refrigerator thermistor 6500JB2002T (temperature sensing that drives run decisions)
A compressor diagnosis is expensive and time-consuming. Ruling out normal run behavior, airflow issues, and common start/control components helps you avoid replacing the sealed system when the real cause is a simpler electrical or sensing problem.
Last updated: January 2026





