Chrysler Airtemp

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toploader55

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Oct 10, 2007
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Massachusetts Sand Bar, Cape Cod
We are having a very rare Hotspell here on Ol' Cape Cod. A friend of mine was in dire need of a good night sleep and does not have a Window A/C.
I bought this Chrysler Airtemp in 1970. I have not used it in about 9 years,so I plugged her in to see if she would still work and BINGO. She fired right up and is throwing Ice Cold Air !!!!

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I bought a Westinghouse Air Conditioner about 8 years ago from the St Vincent De Paul Thrift Store for $20. Heavy as hell, but it works wonderful. I use it every summer, when needed. Our summer here in the Pacific Northwest does not require it as of yet. (about 52 degrees at night,maybe 60 during the day. UUUUGGGGGHHHHH!) But they built them to last back then. Good for you for finding a great unit!!
 
My grandparents had one of these in their family room. In a sleeve through the wall. The front panel design was inspired...you could collapse the front to be virtually flush with the wall, then just pull open the louvers and the front and be ready to go.

Funny story. I was visiting them sitting one hot afternoon in that family room with that a/c blasting. They had an exhaust fan in the wall between the family room and their bedroom (to pull the cool air in). I got so distracted with that fan pinwheeling (my grandfather was napping) that I kept switching it on and off...my grandfather got so provoked. Nice memory.
 
No AC? OMG!!!!

what is life like without AC? I turned my window units on sometime in mid to late april. The bigger unit in the front of the house runs almost 24/7...of course there is someone home all the time..either two legged four legged. We have so much pollen and dust down here that opening the windows and running the attic fan is a disaster. If the pollen does'nt plug up your nose; cleaning the dust and dirt that's sucked in will. There's also that issue of everyting getting stickey...furniture, hardwoods and sometimes the tile will swet.
 
I understand there is a heatwave

in the Northeast. It was 101 here in middle georgia last Saturday. My partner keeps a window unit in his bedroom but the rest of the house has no AC. We have high ceilings and a center hall. The house stays around 73-75 degrees when it hits 100 outside. Really old houses are great for staying cool in the summer. I can wear comfortable clothes and keep the shutters closed during the day to maintain that 30 dollar electric bill. It hits around 70 to 80 dollars with that little window unit running at night in July and August.
 
I asked a few old timers down here in Houston what people did before air conditioning.
They said that you had to leave your shoes out to "air" after wearing them so they wouldn't mold in the closet. Some people had a light bulb burning continuously inside their closets to keep mildew down (the heat from the bulb was susposed to do this). When you hung clothes out to dry in the middle of summer, it took most of the day for them to dry.
A lot of houses built back as recent as the 1940's had high ceilings and ceiling fans to assist with the air circulation.

To tell you the truth, I just wouldn't be able to stand it!

Oh yes, back to this thread:
Yes those Chrysler Airtemp a/c units were excellent. Also their automotive a/c units were some of the coldest around. I seem to remember that Chrysler Airtemp was one of the leaders in air conditioner models for casement windows too.
 
When I was 16

I worked for an Appliance Store that sold Chrysler Airtemp.The smaller window series was called the "Tempette". The Deluxe series was the "Imperial" line. The "Custom" series were A/C and Heat Pumps in the winter. The "Titan" series started at 18,000BTU and went as high as 33,000 BTU. Those Titans on the coldest setting could keep a house at 58 degrees when it was 95 outside. They were sooooo energy efficient back then. (Yeah,Right) LOL. They also made Casement units and Horizontal Sliding window units. I have an Old Brochure somewhere that I'll try to dig up.
 
How fun to see again.

My grandparents had this exact unit in a bedroom upstairs. It didn't ever get used except after 9 PM to cool the room down before bed. I loved the front panel and was always impressed that it said "Chrysler" on the outside. They had a giant Norge in the living room wall that cooled the entire main floor. Air conditioning was only allowed to be turned on in the late afternoon and run through the night - if the heat and humidity warranted it. Usually the Norge was turned off at 10:30 PM. Now I know they were born before a/c and didn't have a house with electric service until they moved to Omaha during WWII, there were no air conditioned schools when I was young - and no "early out" days because of hot weather, but I don't think I could do it anymore...I'll keep my Bryant running day and night, May through October!
 
Airtemp Was The Best Car A/C EVER!

Chrysler's work with Airtemp was worth it. It was true status in the 1960's to own a Chrysler-made car with the rear window sticker telling passers-by that it was Airtemp equipped. Our family's 1962 Chrysler Newport easily froze you out on a sweltering hot day, and gave you the choice of recirculated or fresh air. Ditto our '69 Newport. And of course, the push button a/c system that seemed to be a Chrysler trademark. But you had to learn a few tricks: Max a/c was recirculated air; plain a/c was conditioned fresh air; and you had to pull out the plain a/c button for power ventilation.
Those were the days when Chrysler's engineering heritage actually stood for something.
 
It's a GE *Custom Manhattan* Model. LOL

Mom's house had a 73/74 Sears Coldspot in the wall.

23,000 BTU/h (5.75 rooms @ 4,000 BTU per room)
220 volts 30amp line, 3,833 watts. Huge plug like a U.S dryer!

6.0 EER Energy Efficiency Ratio (i.e. BTU/watt)
6 is awful
10 to 12 is average and above that is nice.

EER can be misleading. States how much heat is moved per watt fo power, but doed not tell at all about dehumidification. Less efficient EERs tend to mean smaller coils. Smaller inside coil (evaporator) means a cooler coil which means better dehumdifications. And in my climate is ALL about dehumidification.

Two GE carry cools handled the larger bedrooms. My room had one window, so NO A/C for me! IIRC it was 4 to 6k BTU/h. Noisy suckers, but it was better than heat! Nice Lexan (plastic) cabinet meant they lasted over 30 years!

Anyhoo....here is a vinatage unit or two I ran across today during the appraisal process. Enjoy!

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