Window Air Conditioners Good and Bad

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toploader55

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Oct 10, 2007
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Massachusetts Sand Bar, Cape Cod
I have a Friedrich Window A/C that is 3 years old.

It has gotten noisier over the past 2 years and just is rusting and falling apart.

I thought they were suppose to be the "Cadillac" of A/Cs but I found it to be a piece of crap. Supposed to have been built in the USA, it proudly displayed on the box after I got it home, "Made in China". I should have returned it then.

Then there is their line called Kuhl. I believe that one is made in Texas, but also is ridiculously priced for a window A/C.

So... I now come to the $50,000 question...

What do you think ??? Any preferences, Brands or Suggestions ?

I really would love an A/C that I could sleep with it on all night. Lately it's been chill the room down to 65, then shut it off only to wake up hot and swealtering.
 
Yes but

"Our North American factory is only hours from our distribution center — not overseas — for fast delivery."

Remember, Mexico is considered "north america" by the NAFTA agreement. Just saying.

I seriously doubt it was made in Texas.
 
Addendum

From their site.

"In 2006, Friedrich began production at a new, state-of-the art manufacturing facility in Monterrey, Mexico, making it the sole remaining North American manufacturer of room air conditioners.

Told ya.
 
Last I looked their A/C's looked like clones of what LG puts out there, aside from the Kuhl series which is clearly their own. I'd be leery of anything that looks identical to something else out there, like LG.

Unless you're going to pony up for a Kuhl series unit or are willing to go on a hunt for something vintage you're basically SOL. GE, Frigidaire, Soleus, etc are all the same thing made in China either by Electrolux or for them not sure but they all come from the same place. Last I was in the market for a window shaker LG was the best thing I could find, not sure if they still are.

Samsung made a good windowshaker but they're out of that business now, and so is Whirlpool sadly.

Does anyone know if Carrier still makes window units?
 
our local Habitat 4 Humanity store had a couple of dozen sitting for months if not a year on the shelves. Old, newer. Pretty much $50 each.  It was warm last week and when I went in most of them were gone. They do get some decent ones in quite regularly as people start clearing out the basements of their elderly parents etc. The new stuff is treated more like disposable stuff now. Just the other day I was helping our neighbor with her car in the garage not starting.. there's a fairly newish 8k unit sitting in the box by the garbage cans and I asked her if she was throwing it out,, yes, did it work, yes.  You can tell there's not much too them when you can pick one up without much grunting, not like the vintage ones.  Most people who don't have central air, which most homeowners now have, but people who live in older apartments,, they just go to Walmart and buy some $79 - $120 Danby or such without any thought as to is it too small, too big, no clue. 
 
That's a shame. They made a REALLY good window unit at least up into the late 90s. One of my dad's rentals had a 13,000 BTU model. Made the mistake of putting it out in the alley when it got infested by bird mites and the motor mount sagged to where the fan was hitting the pan. Not sure if that was fixable but it probably was. Two things I loved about it were how QUIET it was and built like a tank. Those used to be a common sight in Chicago windows when I was younger.
 
I've bought 3 or 4 units in the past few years. They are all becoming BOL. A $250 unit is only a small step up from a $125. My advice is to go to WalMart and spend $110 on a 5,000 btu GE window unit. Get one that has all mechanical controls. that's what I did for my mom last spring. The unit is in its 2nd year and still looks/runs like new.

Jim
 
I have a Samsung 10,000 BTU that I bought new at Lowes for about $150.  Has a remote.  It is installed in a three car garage and runs the entire summer set at 74 degrees.  It has been installed for about 9 years and I do not take it out during the winter months. It never skips a beat.  Very quiet.  No rust at all.  I clean the filter about 2 times during the Summer.  Coils are very clean with no rust anywhere.  It keeps the entire garage very comfortably cool.

B
 
I have a

Haier 8,000 from Walmart in one of our bedrooms just so we don't have to cool the whole house down to 65 while we are sleeping. so far it does a good job, remote control, pretty quiet, and a choice of auto setting or constant fan cool. The biggest thing I've noticed is that ALL the units I looked at have ONLY a molded Styrofoam piece between the inside air and the outside heat and that allows light to seep in (I work nights and don't like that). My old 1991 Kenmore 5,000 it replaced was metal in between the inner and outer foam panels. It still runs after 24 years...MIL has it now. Wonder how long the Haier will last???
 
I have a 5000 btu Perfect Aire (99% sure it is made by the same company that produces Frigidaire units) and it is on it's 4th season with no issues. I have torn it apart and cleaned the insides (both coils, drain pans, etc, fans) a couple times, and adjusted the thermostat last summer because from the factory it was set to not cool the room past about 68 degrees on max cool. Now I can put frost on the walls if I so desire. I have it in my bedroom and sleep with it on the majority of the summer. Not terribly noisy, but not whisper quiet either. It does what it needs to do, and I think I only paid about $89 for it.
 
We have a 10,000 BTU Whirlpool in the upstairs bonus room. It was there when we bought the house eight years ago, though admittedly it doesn't run but when we use the room it does just fine. It got the crap beat out of it in a hail storm in 2009, but the insurance company paid to have it combed and is still working well.

Only complaint is one of the knobs broke. They want $25 for a molded plastic knob. A $5 pair of needle nose pliers works just as well.
 
Have you ever considered a split unit system?

http://www.airconditionerinstallati...loads/2012/08/LG-diagramatic-split-system.jpg

They really are very efficient and quiet.

Actually it is kinda weird that there is not more of the split units going around in the States.

Maybe you should have it checked out, should not be that more expensive.

We have two LG art cool units in the apartment that we are letting and havent had a problem ever. They are about 10 years old.

Regards
 
The split units are somewhat new to the United States. They have slowly gained popularity over the past 10 years or so here, but the window unit remains popular because of the ease of installation and removal. I have mostly seen aplits used in additions built onto a house that has existing air conditioning and the split cools the addition.
 
Split units are much more expensive than window units....they can be comparable in cost to regular full house A/C. I got my unit about 9 years ago and it was about $2800 at the time. They have probably come down in price now. I like that it is very quiet as I find window A/C units very loud and bothersome.

Gary
 
@ Mieleforever

Most older (125+) houses in the U.S. tend to be made of wood and were made by people who were not what (today) would be called 'professionals'. Things are not evenly spaced or sized, angles are not 90 degrees, wood & lath construction with horsehair and/or lord-alone-knows-what used as plaster. If something looked like it needed an additional brace/beam/support what ever random piece of wood that was available and fit was used. The result is that surprises are a given so there's a tendency not to disturb things unless there's no alternative. This adds to the attraction of window a/c units.

Jim
 

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