The continuing saga - the A/C in my Rockwood Signature Ultralight has always had problems cooling the unit to the point where I thought that the A/C was broken or defective in some way. The air coming out of the ceiling registers was never more than barely cool, and the air flow very weak. I thought I needed a second A/C unit so made a modification to the electrical system to allow the addition of a heat pump.
The A/C unit has also dripped water out of from the inside cover and I thought it was some kind of condensation (wrong). I saw a post where someone added a marine observation port to allow dumping of the cold air directly into the rig, and also saw mention of sealing the duct work to prevent leaks, so I decided to remove the cover and see what I could do to implement some of these fixes. I was also perplexed as to why the A/C was dripping while it was turned off on a foggy night.
I was shocked to see that one bolt was backed out nearly 2 inches, and all were loose - this is why water was dripping. It was probably my bad not checking the bolts, but this dripping was occurring from day one so it could have been poor assembly.
Next, I looked for ducts, but found none. I ran my hand into two slit-like spaces leading into the roof space and concluded that this must be the "ducting" to the air outlets, and was correct. Evidently there are no ducts in my ceiling - the A/C air simply dumps right into the space between the roof and the ceiling (this explains why I felt air coming out of the light fixtures when the A/C is running). Sure there is 3/8 inch styrofoam on the interior of the ceiling and another layer on the inside of the roof, but really? ... using the entire roof as the air ducting system? No wonder the air flow was weak, and temperature was barely cool.
I read another post where someone measured the temperature of their roof to be 191 degrees on a sunny day. I cannot believe that a 3/8 inch layer of styrofoam will do much of anything to keep the ceiling space from becoming really hot and storing that energy in everything in the ceiling, like the light fixtures, structural supports, etc. In effect, the A/C had to cool all structural elements down before it much of anything to cool the rig.
It looks like this A/C unit was designed for a TT because there is a large grid where air is supposed to come out. Rockwood had covered this with a sheet metal plate which deflected the cold air into the slits leading to the ceiling space (see pics). They could then punch a hole anywhere in the ceiling to tap into the "duct" because essentially the entire ceiling is one big duct (talk about a waste of energy).
Because the ceiling air outlets are essentially only eye candy with little to no function, I took off the sheet metal in the A/C cover and was amazed at the difference. A huge volume of icy cold air now comes out of the unit, and in a test yesterday I was able to get the rig down to 65 degrees before the A/C automatically shut off. I've never been able to get the rig that cold under these weather conditions. Sure, I have lost air distribution through the ceiling, but I have gained more than enough cold air to make the rig comfortable.
The take home lesson - if you are having problems with your rig cooling, take off the A/C cover and see what surprises the manufacturer has in store for you. I've learned that my rig looks beautiful on the inside, but those looks come at the expense of function.
The yellow arrow points to one of the slit-like opening into the ceiling space
This is how I discovered that there are no ducts - I fed a tape measure into the slit and worked it back toward an air outlet - no obstructions of any kind and I could move the tape in all directions.
This shows the interior A/C cover where the air was supposed to come out in the original A/C design, and you can see black foam through the grid
This is the interior of the cover - you can see the sheet metal plate which I took off. The A/C unit now blows huge quantities of icy cold air - a gigantic contrast to the barely cool air that has always come out of the unit. I was more than willing to give up poor air distribution for cold air.
Moderator edit to re-size pictures to forum limit of 640px maximum width.
PZ