oldest central air conditioner

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My first house

had gas central air. It was very low cost to operate.
Sky scrapers have suction lines on their roof units so large in diameter, a grown person can stand up inside them.
 
Airtemp

THE Airtemp with the Rv-2 compressor was without a doubt the finest auto A/C system ever designed.
 
Oldest overall system I can think of was a twinned pair of Carrier Weathermaker furnaces and a 5 ton York Tombstone condensing unit from 1970 at my chiropractors old office. The A/C leaked but they had it working during the heat wave in 2012, and it worked well.

Oldest furnace I can think of was my grandmothers 1960 Carrier furnace that lived 48 years before a catastrophic flood took it out of service. It would still be running like a top today if that flooded hadn't happened. The heat exchanger looked brand new still.
 
When I was an undergraduate student, I worked nights as a motion picture projectionist at a number of neighborhood theaters in the Detroit area. Movie theatres were among the first commercial buildings that were air conditioned. At one theater where I worked for a couple of years, one of my duties was to manually turn on and off the air conditioning system which had been installed in 1941 when the theater was built. It took about ten minutes to get the system up and running, it took up and entire large room in the basement. Efficient it was not, but once it got running it cooled the place quickly and beautifully! It drew so much moisture out of the air that the condensation pump had a 3-inch pipe that ran directly to the sewer. I would turn it off about 90 minutes before the last show got out and the place would stay cold for the rest of the night.
 
The Tennessee Supreme Court building was the first office building in Nashville to be air conditioned, in 1936-37. When I worked there in 1988 the original Carrier system was still going. The man who'd overseen the installation had just retired and they were worried about keeping it going without him. I haven't been able to find out if it's been changed out since then, but at any rate 50+ years is pretty good.
 
oldest ac in country

I was at the vanderbuilt mansion on long island and they claim to have one of the 1st acs in the country … it is a fan system with a dry ice in the celler of the house .. probably built in the 1890s… I have in my house the cooling system from 1936 it is a water tower cooler and the ducts are under the ground.. also have my heater from 1930s still working wonderful..
 
Don't get me wrong I love everything vintage and gas, I'm still using my 1965 gas furnaces that are rated an amazing 80% efficient(for the time), but not for A/C. The single best improvement we made was when the original A/C finally died and we replaced with modern electric Amanas.
The house was custom built in 64-65 with a dual zone forced air heating and in the late 60's my GPaw had TWO 3 ton Servel GAS chillers retrofitted, He was probably the first in the neighborhood to adopt central air A/C and the operation price of the inefficient electrics were still a thing for the rich or commercial endeavors. Plus, the house only had 125 AMP service and I suspect that's all many neighbors also had, not really safe enough for vintage electric central air and everything else. My grandma had health problems and needed the house refrigerated to 67 degrees in the summer, LOL I remember you literally had to put a sweater on if you visited more than an hour.
I think the 3 ton was the smallest that Arkla sold, and this was an item pushed by the gas company in those days. Picture two giant industrial rooftop units placed right outside the bedroom window) Anyhow, all this raw American horsepower made a tremendous racket, used a lot of btu's, and there was only a handful of techs certified to service these (which needed to be flushed with fresh antifreeze yearly).
When we finally switched, the gas bill disappeared, the service bill disappeared, and the electric was about the same, and we (and the neighbors) could finally sleep at night, LOL.
Funny story, So these are filled with industrial ammonia gas, and the tech of course wants a $600 each disposal fee to remove them, I tell him naw, I'll find a way to recycle it. So I put a FREEbie ad in clist and get an immediate taker, he hightails it over so fast that he got a $200 ticket exiting the off ramp LOL, So I help him load it up and explain that there are probably some good parts still left on there (he tells me his uncle is in the recycling business) then he takes off and I expect to hear no more about the beloved house refrigerator. A week later our HVAC tech shows up to install the modern A/C and he asks me with a puzzled expression: Did some guy with a gray pickup collect your chiller? I tell him yes, and then he launched into this story of how he's sitting at a stop light about 50 miles away and some guy in a gray pickup pulls up next to him with a gas chiller in the bed. He says he couldn't believe it and had to do a double take because he knows there aren't many around and he's one of the only guys that works on them. We had a great laugh and tried to calculate the coincidence of that.
The first one I dealt with had a not so funny story, My elderly mother called the city and and asked the disposal procedure for these and they tell her to just put it on the tree lawn, she tries to explain that they are gas chillers and have ammonia. The city people says that recycling of these is covered under city services. So out to the treelawn it goes, apparently what happens next is these yo-yos send out a garbage truck and proceed to crush it on the spot. predictably the ammonia canister explodes and 3 service workers have to scurry for their lives because the gas is so potent. My mom says she could smell it inside the house. I would not recommend this form of removal.
Modern air is the way to go unless it's low use vintage electric.
 
Gattis Elementary A/C surprise

The school was built in 1992, not old by our standards but anyway. The cafeteria air handlers were connected a MASSIVE McQuay condensing unit. The brand was a real surprise, I haven't seen them in years, 20 if not longer.

I couldn't get a picture of it because was in a fenced in area with tennis screen strips weaved in the cyclone fence.

Most of the classrooms are still using the original Carrier condensing units, probably around 3.5-4 tons. Air handler/evaporator is in the suspended ceilings in each room. The whole system is computer controlled and can be adjusted at the main Administration office, which to be blunt, sucks. The set point right now is way too high and many of the rooms are basically saunas.

The oldest schools in the district were built in the mid 70's. Some of those older schools have large chiller/heat plants onsite.
 
I remember seeing some older homes from the 1950s or 60s with the old condensor units outside that had the fan mounted to the side. I think they were York possibly. That was likely the oldest I've seen. My house used to have a Fedders system from the 1970s, had two compressors in it. I have seen McQuay units at schools before, from the 90s.
 
>The whole system is computer controlled and can be adjusted at the main Administration office, which to be blunt, sucks. The set point right now is way too high and many of the rooms are basically saunas.

My high school in the 80s allegedly had some sort of computer controls on the heat system. In any case, the system was set to save energy costs with a vengeance. It was not unusual having to wear a coat in class to stay warm...

One teacher actually charted his room temperatures each day. That say, whenever the school district got mentioned for "energy savings" in the local paper, my teacher could fire off a letter that would help tell the whole story...
 
This is the thread with the home built unit. It's in the article in the Chi newspaper. It's way down.


 
My first cousin's house was built in the 1950s and I was told it has a very old central air conditioner that is almost as big as the commercial units, although it hasn't been used in many years.

I loved the round ceiling vents that the older homes with central air had around here. Just something about them looks classic. And also the huge ones in stores.
 
A house we lived in back in the '60s had a heat pump unit that looked like the one in the first post. A long rectangular box with the outdoor coil along a long side, and two fans that blew through it horizontally. It was an American Standard.

As for outlet registers, I liked the ones that they used in the '60s that were cut into the baseboard and were angled. There are still homes around here that have those.
 
Those registers were used here commonly from the late 40s right into the early 90s. Most of the homes in my neighborhood have those and they were all early 90s homes. Ours is more modern and has them all in the floor though. (Or ceiling, upstairs)
I do like that they can't be 100% blocked by furniture since they protrude up out of the floor.
 

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