Aug-05-2016 11:46 AM
Aug-16-2016 10:49 AM
2oldman wrote:beemerphile1 wrote:Does that mean that if my a/c cools the room to 75F, it's now pumping out 35F air?
The unit is internally recirculating the same air over and over to achieve those low temps.
Aug-15-2016 08:15 PM
TenOC wrote:
Question for my RV Air Condition Experts.
What is the difference in 13.5K BTU and 15.0k BTU? I know what a British Thermor Unit is. My question is HOW does the A/C achieve the difference in the RV? What is the real effect to the person inside the RV?
Given the same outside and inside temperatures.
1. Does the larger BTU unit blow more volume of air? More CFM?
or
2. Does the larger BTU unit blow colder air? I thought that under ideal conditions the A/C should cool the air only about 5 to 10 degrees.
Aug-15-2016 01:28 PM
beemerphile1 wrote:Does that mean that if my a/c cools the room to 75F, it's now pumping out 35F air?
The unit is internally recirculating the same air over and over to achieve those low temps.
Aug-15-2016 12:53 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:
...I can go dig in 25 years of work orders to find some- I can guarantee that I never let an air conditioner leave here with split temperatures that large, because- for around the fifth or sixth time in the last week- the large split temperatures are because there is a leak between the supply and return, so the return air is actually much colder than the thermometer is reading.....
Aug-15-2016 11:16 AM
greenrvgreen wrote:
So far neither of those insulted experts have posted their own readings. While I'm sure they have better things to do, how is it that they found the time to hurl insults?
"Loose flap" would have been my guess also, and I'm no expert. But at the same time, NO ONE but Oldman has posted the temps going in and coming out of their ACs.
Aug-15-2016 10:51 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:44 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:38 AM
greenrvgreen wrote:No, I made sure of that. The vents are pointing away from the intake.
..the pics seem to show the large AC ceiling unit as the intake and a small, remote ceiling vent as the outflow. Doesn't seem likely to me that one is contaminating the other.
Aug-15-2016 10:33 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:25 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:22 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:18 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:07 AM
Aug-15-2016 10:04 AM