NOTE:

This step involves working with high voltages, so please make sure that the fridge is not plugged and there is no power to it before you do any cutting or work with it. When looking for a place to cut a hole, please consult the manual to see if it shows where coolant lines may be running, in the case of my fridge they run along the walls only. If you cut into the wrong wall, you risk cutting the coolant lines.

This was probably the most involved step when it came to setting up the dry aging fridge. Some people just buy a surge protector with a flat cable that they run inside their fridge, but I wanted to contain everything inside the fridge and not have cables hanging out of the door. For this you'll need to look around the fridge for a suitable area to cut and carve out a hole to fit the work box. On my fridge the best place that did not have any coolant lines or any potentially important parts was the bottom left hand side of the fridge. With my current setup I am running two power cables, one will be solely to provide power to the newly installed outlet and you'll have the power cable to the fridge itself.

I proceeded to measure and cut out a hole using my dremmel tool. I'm sure it would have been easier with a saw.

I then carved out the insulation until I could fit the work box in snuggly.

Cut off the end of the power cord that usually goes into the computer and strip the wires.

I crimped connectors on the wires, but some people just tin them. This is to give the wires a solid connection.

I then drilled a hole in the back of the fridge where I ran the power cable through

I then inserted the cable into the work box and did a fit test

Once everything fit properly, I connected the wires to the proper terminals on the GFCI outlet

Again, push the work box with the outlet and cable into the whole that has been carved out and check fit

Plug it into a wall outlet, plug in your Germ Guardian and see if you have power

If everything fits perfectly and you have power, then spray some Great Stuff insulation foam in the hole and push the work box in

Hold the work box in place until the foam cures a bit, because it expands you want to be sure it doesn't push the box out

Be sure to vacuum out all the insulation that was carved out, I also found that using a wet paper towel works well to get any remaining bits out of the fridge.