Got an oldie here! This is a 1930's era Crosley Shelvador fridge. For those not up on the history of Crosley fridges, they are an important part of our history. Crosley radio company, along with several other early 'vacuum tube radio' makers branched out into other products such as fridges. One of Crosley's engineers came up with idea that lots of additional storage space could be made by mounting shelving in an indent in the inside of the fridge door. Crosley patented this design and defended it through the 1950's; without licensing it to any other US appliance brand.
Crosley stopped manufacturing the Shelvador in the 40's and contracted with Kelvinator to manufacture the Shelvador for them. It was still a Crosley-only model and only sold through Crosley; but manufactured by Kelvinator. This is good for us enthusiasts because Kelvinator is legendary for their reliability and build quality. Furthermore it helps with locating parts since the parts are common between the Crosley and Kelvinator models of the same era. In this video, I have a very early Shelvador which was a random road-trip find while traveling several hours north of my home state. It is all original, aside from some missing parts such as the shelves and racks. This model has a top-mounted belt-drive compressor. It's a single cylinder compressor driven by a Delco repulsion-induction motor. The whole compressor unit is suspended on springs for vibration and noise reasons. A previous owner had laid the whole thing on its side and allowed the mechanical parts to tumble in the cabinet, breaking a line..