why does the fan still run on the unit after it cycles is over. but it is blowing hot air not cold
in central ac we use chiller to cool the water which is circulated throughout the building . by blowing air over the cooled water tubes the air got cooled. in night time inplace of cold water FM chiller , hot water is circulated which make the air hot.
drain is clogged. or there a hole in drain pan.
OK, this isn't an answer obviously, but more of a better explanation of my question. My unit was frozen up when I got home tonight, and I've seen some people run water over the ice to melt it away. But it seems like it would be the same as pouring cold water on a hot engine (for you car buffs), making the block crack and bust. I have turned the unit off to see if it will melt itself, but its so hot in the house, if there's a quicker way to get it working again, I'll do it! Try a fan, blowing the (excessive) hot air onto the ice. Long term; you must set the controls (lower) so that the device cycles off as the icing begins. This lowers the effectiveness of the AC but keeps it running.
While there is no such thing as a "normal" menstrual cycle, 60 days is terribly long. I suspect that instead of a long cycle, what you are actually experiencing is intermittent ammenorrhea where you fail to ovulate or bleed at regular intervals. Many women who have anovulatory cycles will still bleed at regular intervals due to the progesterone drop they experience after the body attempts ovulation. In your case, it seems that when you fail to ovulate, you fail to bleed as well. Many women have occasional anovulatory cycles. I recommend that you begin charting your basal body temperature over a period of time in order to see if you are ovulating or not, and if you are, what percentage of cycles are ovulatory. Short of an ultrasound, charting BBT is the simplest way to tell if you ovulated in a cycle. That being said, you should probably see a doctor to rule out a more serious explanation than occasional anovulation.
It was an accident. Frank Epperson was 11 years old, he left it on his porch over night by accident. It was cold that night so the pop froze.
Over-obvious answer? Your radiator, or one of your radiator hoses, leaks - badly.
First thing to check is if it's icing over. If so, low on fridgerent.
This is caused by low coolant levels in most instances.
check the coolant level, or, possible stuck thermostat.
because all of your pours are opened due to the hot water and you feel the cold as it is blowing into and over those pours
It's probably the radiator. Make sure there's enough coolant in the radiator.
The Harmattan is a cold-dry and dusty trade wind, blowing over the West African subregion of the Sahara Desert.
Your cooling system is empty of coolant and you must have a large leak somewhere.
I don't thinkso because you would still have a cold.
contaminants in system, over charged bad metering devise
Because cold air blowing in from the North Sea meets with the warmer air coming from the gulf of Mexico over Britain. When the hot air and cold air meet any clouds in the hot air cool enough to rain.
No, cows are pretty heavy and stable, so when the wind stops blowing, they don't fall over.