bdosborn wrote:
Seems like somebody around here has done that before
Bruce
ddupre wrote: The fan will move a lot of air letting the heat escape from the bottom while fresh air comes in through the hatch. I am confused why this wouldn't work.
MtnDon wrote:ddupre wrote: The fan will move a lot of air letting the heat escape from the bottom while fresh air comes in through the hatch. I am confused why this wouldn't work.
Maybe I am not following your word picture very well. These window units all exhaust the warm air out the finned rear end of the condenser. Air enters that section of the A/C through vents on the top and one or both sides of the portion that is designed to hang outside. So the path you described would not work. Provision must also be made for the condensate to drain to the outside.
Agreed with all the above, but I wanted to try a "different" approach, an A/C that could run while sealed inside the hatch, and internally-mounted for ease of use for my own reasons, as related in this thread http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=54945&hilit=+duct And did I ever pay the price to be different; I rebuilt, re-configured it 3-4 times before it worked correctly. As stated by citylights, the unit has to have unrestricted airflow in three places (1.) the cool side (output) cannot intake too much already cooled air, it'll freeze up, (2.) the exhaust side must be allowed to vent freely, with little or no interference (this was my nemesis...too much heated air due to backpressure, causing thermal shutdown), and (3.) the A/C chassis needs to be able to cool itself, so unheated ambient air must be available. I had no problem with #1, #3 was OK (but I added a computer case fan to supplement the ambient airflow, just in case),citylights wrote:MtnDon wrote:ddupre wrote: The fan will move a lot of air letting the heat escape from the bottom while fresh air comes in through the hatch. I am confused why this wouldn't work.
Maybe I am not following your word picture very well. These window units all exhaust the warm air out the finned rear end of the condenser. Air enters that section of the A/C through vents on the top and one or both sides of the portion that is designed to hang outside. So the path you described would not work. Provision must also be made for the condensate to drain to the outside.
That is a perfect picture and it illustrates how you have to duct it. Outside air must come in the sides without too much obstruction, so that the unit fan can blow it through the coil, and exhaust away- also without much obstruction.
These things are designed to be free entire and exhaust. Any obstruction (like putting them in a box) detracts from their designed air flow. Even if you add a, external fan, if you do not direct the air flow just right it may not work.
With that said, if you put them in a box, with few air restrictions for entrance and exhaust, and no air short circuits, they can work. An external air blower can also help. You just have to do it right.
Soooo much easier to put them on drawer slides!
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