Thing is, I bought a new fridge. Fridge-freezer combo, refrigerator on top, freezer below. Now that I can no longer just drop by any grocery store I like, the tiny freezer compartment of the fridge that comes with the apartment was becoming just way to small, hence the new one. Bought it from amazon and got it delivered this morning.
So far, so good.
While I was rooting around the compartment with the compressor and stuff, looking to the bloody cable for plugging it in, I noticed the rear of it looked like cardboard.
Like this:
http://www.der-gute-erfahrungsbericht.d ... kseite.jpg
Image embed not working so clicking is required, sorry.
Up close, it looks like the reinforced cardboard with a corrugated layer between two flat layers.
Any fridge I had owned before, or helped someone move, had a big radiator at the rear. I check the manual and there was no mention of how it should look or any safety measures particularly pertinent to the rear of the things, it does mention that one should remove the styrofoam protection that may or may not be mounted between the fridge chassis and the cooling body.
So I reckoned that this was just part of that packaging, shoved a finger underneath and started ripping it off. Only then did I notice that
a) it was in fact glued to the fridge chassis and
b) wasn't cardboard but a hollow sheet of plastic.
Like this, only in gray and much flimsier looking:

I didn't immediately notice it was plastic since I had, at times, encountered cardboards that were just as tough.
I didn't rip all of it out, far from it, about the surface area of a hand and a half, from the bottom edge. I duct taped most of it back on for now.
It's the first energy-saving fridge I ever owned and is clearly decades ahead of the simple refrigerators I had known in the past.
So I plugged it in and, after about an hour or so, it was already as cold as it should be, both the refrigerator and the freezer compartments seem to be working fine.
No aberrant noises, it's fairly quiet, as it should be, no weird smells or anything. The coolant is R600a, Isobutane, so there wouldn't be any smell from that anyway. I didn't notice any condensation forming when I ripped off that plastic, so I doubt I directly damaged the parts of the cooling system in which it would be under pressure.
Instead of a radiator it uses the metal side-walls to get rid of the heat, darn clever bit of engineering.
Now the company that does technical customer service for the manufacturer couldn't help me out, they could take my details for sending around a technician (pricey) but any technical questions can't be answered before someone from the spare-parts department comes back in on monday.
My question is: Did I merely ruin some cosmetic covering of no further consequence or did I break something vital to the fridge's operation?
I'd like to know since today would be optimal for a trip to the big-box grocery place to a month's worth of the frozen food I can't get in my neighborhood, which is the reasons I did buy this thing.