ac unit in room

Size of this preview: 793 × 600 pixels. Other resolutions: 317 × 240 pixels | 635 × 480 pixels | 1,016 × 768 pixels | 1,280 × 968 pixels | 1,773 × 1,341 pixels. I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. In some countries this may not be legally possible; I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time. current05:41, 18 November 20051,773 × 1,341 Carnildo Created by myself on November 17, 2005. Photograph of the internal section of a typical single-room air conditioning unit. The external section is Image:Single-room AC unit-external.jpg The following other wikis use this file: This file contains additional information such as Exif metadata which may have been added by the digital camera, scanner, or software program used to create or digitize it. If the file has been modified from its original state, some details such as the timestamp may not fully reflect those of the original file.

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top 10 home ac units Date and time of data generation
how much is a air conditioner unit 22:30, 17 November 2005
ac at big lots File change date and time Y and C positioning Date and time of digitizing Flash fired, auto mode, red-eye reduction mode Focal plane X resolution Focal plane Y resolution Focal plane resolution unit One-chip color area sensor 463 posts, read 765,213 times I have 2 AC units right outside my family room. Everytime they come on you can here them when we are in the family room. Anyway to redirect the noise somehow? 4,764 posts, read 6,583,048 times 5,935 posts, read 6,480,805 times

14,720 posts, read 15,190,421 times 153 posts, read 242,837 times Those look like 10 SEER units. Poor little guys always get picked on. Probably have piston compressors in them... that's the noise screaming that someone was cheap in selecting the unit for the home. Not you per se, but the builder. You can try out a compressor blanket over the compressors but I doubt it will do much good. They are noisy beasts even with a blanket on them. Better off upgrading to a better unit 13 SEER minimum and look for a unit that has the compressor enclosed in a compartment with a blanket too if necessary. Really the only way you will truly be happy IMHO. Make sure what ever unit you select that it has a scroll compressor. These are much quieter. There's really not many air conditioners made any more with piston compressors. Your windows look like double pane glass... so that's pretty loud. 8,923 posts, read 33,173,370 times Switching out AC units really doesn't make fiscal sense.

They are brand new! But here is the plate off of the carrier unit: 7,750 posts, read 14,728,356 times Originally Posted by blakeas That is because he is an HVAC tech. Quite honestly I would bet 90% of them recommend a new unit anytime someone posts a question/complaint about a >1 year old unit. You have scroll compressors, which don't make the bulk of the noise, the fan does. Do your units rattle? If you place your hand on the top or side cage does the noise get quieter? Yeah I know, no one likes to spend money ---must clench wallet harder! ... expects silver bullet when only the Lone Ranger has them. Given that... the unit is 2 years old via Serial Number you posted -I can't find any info on that model though the B in the model number typically signify builder grade so probably won't find any info on them any how... (they should be scroll compressors tho-post a pic of the compressor if you can-- the big black thing inside the unit at the bottom) start up date goes by when you took possession of the house (close date) Typically the builder warranties them for a year.