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The evolution of fridges has seen the appliance elevated from something that kept food cool to a complex smart device. While smart fridge quality and functions can vary by manufacturer, many modern refrigerators can automatically fill your glass to the right level, add humidity to keep vegetables fresh for longer, and send users alerts to warn about temperature issues or problems with filters. However, one mode available with certain refrigerators might seem a little puzzling — Sabbath Mode. 

Sabbath Mode is a feature that allows people to operate devices without carrying out acts forbidden on the Sabbath. More specifically, it’s designed for people who observe traditional restrictions on electricity usage during Shabbat (the Jewish Sabbath Day) and other religious holidays. Generally, this rule states that operating electrical appliances and even turning the lights on or off is not allowed on the Sabbath. 

This last fact might not seem that important when it comes to fridges. But what happens every time you open a fridge door? A light switches on. In other words, just opening the door on the Sabbath breaks Judaism’s strict laws governing the Shabbat. This is the crux of the matter: Sabbath Mode exists so that those who comply with the relevant religious laws can continue to keep their food cool and fresh during the Shabbat. 

In the case of the interior fridge light, Sabbath Mode works by disabling the activation of the light when the door is opened. Some manufacturers disable the light altogether, while others have opted for keeping the light permanently on, but operating in a dimmer mode. 

What does Sabbath Mode do on a refrigerator?

Adjusting how the refrigerator lights work is perhaps the most obvious function that Sabbath Mode activates, but it’s far from being the only one. 

For instance, opening the door raises the temperature in the fridge, which in turn can activate the compressor to bring the temperature back down. One way that Sabbath Mode addresses this is to integrate delays into the system, so that opening the door doesn’t directly electrically activate it.

Similarly, defrost cycles can be influenced by factors like temperature drops, how many times the door has been opened, and how long the compressor’s been running for. Essentially, this means that opening the door could trigger this cycle. A common method to address this is to switch the defrost cycle to a simple timer when Sabbath Mode is activated. 

Other features commonly disabled in Sabbath Mode are touchpads, digital displays, alarms, status lights, and any other electrical buttons. Additionally, functions like temperature adjustment, water coolers, and icemakers are usually disabled when the mode is activated. 

Essentially, this is a religious safe mode that allows those who observe the Sabbath to keep their refrigerator running without triggering any electrical actions that would normally violate Shabbat laws. Smart fridges may be one of those smart home devices that often aren’t worth the price, but for strict followers of the Shabbat, Sabbath Mode might make it a worthwhile purchase. 

Do other kitchen appliances have a Sabbath Mode?

Sabbath Mode on refrigerators demonstrates just how inventive people can be to continue to use electrical devices while remaining adherent to religious laws. But refrigerators aren’t the only appliance to feature such a mode: many other appliances also include a Sabbath Mode. 

Let’s start by looking at ovens. Modern smart ovens are growing in popularity and could replace air fryers as the “hottest” kitchen gadget. Some of the latest ovens also feature a Sabbath Mode. There are strict rules as to how food is prepared for the Shabbat, and this includes how food is warmed. Typically, ovens aren’t allowed even if they are turned on before Shabbat begins, as even triggering a thermostat through opening the door would violate Shabbat laws. 

Common features in ovens with Sabbath Mode include the disabling of auto-off functions, special lighting modes, and the disabling of temperature controls, although the thermostat is still active. The latter is allowed because of a “loophole” that says triggering an “electrical function that is neither beneficial nor wanted” is permissible. This scenario can be applied to oven use, but only if the entire oven is emptied of food when it’s opened.

Other appliances that are available with Sabbath Modes include stoves, microwaves, dishwashers, and wine refrigerators. We won’t go into the details of the features of these devices other than to say that they’re there to allow users a level of functionality is still available without compromising the religious laws that are central to Judaism.





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An inline six (straight six) engine is a type of internal combustion engine that arranges six cylinders in a single straight row (in a line, hence the name), rather than splitting them into two banks like a V6. Mechanically, this layout is what sets it apart: All six pistons fire along one axis, on top of a single cylinder head and crankshaft, which gives the engine inherent primary and secondary balance without needing counterweights or balance shafts.

Because of cost, packaging, and the engineering complexity of casting a longer block, only a handful of automakers still build inline sixes today, namely BMW, Mazda, General Motors, Mercedes-Benz, Stellantis (through brands like Jeep and Ram), and Jaguar Land Rover. Still, what an inline six does inherently well is smoothness; the natural balance of the firing order means less vibration and a more refined power delivery than a V6.

This often comes along with strong torque characteristics and a simpler, often more serviceable design since there’s only one head and one set of accessories to deal with. However, the very same things that make the inline-six superior in some ways can also work against it in others. Here are four common problems with inline-six engines.

The inline-six’s size and dimensions lead to packaging challenges

Beyond the length itself, an inline six’s mass sits higher in the chassis than a V-configuration engine of similar weight would. Autoblog puts it directly: A straight-six “will typically have a higher center of gravity” than a V-engine of similar mass. This is because the V engine is notably shorter due to having two banks; that allows it to sit lower in the engine bay which helps with center of gravity.

This is also partly why BMW slants its engines. Rather than mounting them upright, the brand tilts them roughly 30 degrees in the chassis, a packaging choice made to clear the hood line on cars designed around shorter V8s and to place the center of mass lower. The long design of an inline-six engine creates packaging challenges that can also limit vehicle design. Its size generally confines it to a front-mounted position.

Another reason why V6 engines are often favored over older inline-sixes is that the length of the inline-six can be a problem for crash safety since shorter V6s could do with more favorable crumple zones. Where an inline-six also falls short is packaging and width versus length; the long block doesn’t fit well in transverse front-wheel-drive platforms, and it takes up significant longitudinal space in the engine bay, which is part of why it’s largely been confined to rear-wheel-drive and truck applications.

The inline-six’s longer camshaft leads to greater flex and torsion

When the car is on the move, all of its components feel weight shifts. Because of that, many of these components can also flex. Where a V6 basically splits cylinders with three on each bank, an inline-six lines them up in a straight row. The downside? The crankshaft is much longer on an inline-six. That extra length is precisely what a crankshaft’s torsional twist scales with, which is why the inline six’s one-piece crank fights more resistance than a V6’s shorter one ever has to. With every cylinder added, the flex is a more serious problem -– partly why seven-cylinder engines don’t exist.

An engineering paper published by Politechnika Krakowska (Cracow University of Technology) ties the severity of that twist to bore size. In other words, it flags anything above approximately 90mm as the point where torsional vibration turns into a real problem you need to counter. You can do so by first trimming the crankshaft mass. However, when that does not work, the paper’s prescribed fix is the torsional vibration damper, built around “increasing the work of friction (damping work) and thus decreasing the crankshaft torsion.”

Engine Builder Magazine puts the underlying problem more plainly, describing torsional vibration as “the end-to-end twisting and rebounding of the crankshaft caused by combustion,” which is why some form of damper ends up on nearly every multi-cylinder engine. Bore diameter and crankshaft length are just two of several variables engineers juggle to get an inline six smooth. The leftover, uncancelled vibration from all of this juggling also produces torsional vibrations in the camshaft, not the crankshaft alone.

Inline-six engines suffer from uneven cylinder air/fuel distribution

Crankshaft flexing isn’t the only inherent problem of placing six cylinders in a row instead of splitting them into two V-shaped banks. Another practical consideration of such a design is the fact that the intake manifold needs considerably longer, more convoluted runners to reach every cylinder evenly. In other words, the potential problem is the manifold not distributing air and fuel evenly to the first and last cylinder in line, and that can cause combustion problems.

Ford’s old 144, 170, 200, and 250 cubic-inch inline-sixes show what that looks like in practice. Those engines cast the intake manifold directly into the cylinder head as one piece, and per OnAllCylinders, “the log-style intake manifold suffered from air and fuel distribution issues.” Put plainly, that means certain cylinders along that single row pulled in a different air-fuel ratio than others, simply because of where they sat relative to the carburetor feeding them.

A 2016 SAE study using an inline six heavy-duty engine found that as intake valve closing timing was delayed, cylinder-to-cylinder power output varied, ranging from a 9% difference at one timing to a 38% difference at a later one. The researchers traced part of that variation to intake runner length and the direction fuel flows back into the manifold.

Some inline-sixes are notorious for timing chain problems

When we wrote our five inline-six engines you should avoid list, all but one of the engines covered had notable timing chain issues. Some BMW inline-sixes, like the N57, get hit with this criticism often, partly because the chain sits at the firewall side of the block. To replace the chain, cost depends heavily on whether it sits at the front or back of the engine. 

RepairPal prices a timing chain tensioner job on the front-accessible N54 335i at $1,235 to $1,707; rear-mounted chains, like on the N47, cost more. One owner on BimmerFest was quoted $5,500 for a related N55 chain repair. The difference is mostly labor: BMW Insights puts dealer labor at $1,200 to $1,500+ versus $600 to $800 at an independent shop, with rear-mounted jobs adding hours since the engine often has to come out first. 

Mazda’s new turbo inline-six in the CX-90 and CX-70 follows a similar layout. It runs three separate chains, one each for the camshafts, crankshaft, and fuel pump, all positioned at the rear of the engine rather than the front, per discussion on Mazdas247. That’s the same positioning choice that makes BMW’s chain jobs so expensive, since reaching it again means dropping the engine. It is worth noting that timing chain problems aren’t inherent to inline-six engines, but rather that some inline-six engines had to compromise due to length and place their timing chains where servicing them is a lot more difficult.





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