yes, if you drive and keep your windows open
Depending on the the out side temperature even when the air conditioner sits idle, the refrigerant inside the air conditioner is changing from a liquid to a vapor .
Because the cool air from the air conditioner is denser than the warm air in the room and sinks. Placed high up the cool air will have time to get further from the air conditioner before it settles to the floor, allowing it to cool more of the room. Placed on the floor the cool air will mostly pool around the air conditioner and very little of the room will be cooled. Some air conditioner are actually placed relatively low in a room, but they have fans and baffles that blow the cold air upwards to the ceiling resulting in the same effect as placing the air conditioner high (maybe even better as the fan blows the cool air not only up to the ceiling but across it, possibly covering a larger volume of the room than cool air falling passively from an air conditioner placed high but without fans).
Because the cool air from the air conditioner is denser than the warm air in the room and sinks. Placed high up the cool air will have time to get further from the air conditioner before it settles to the floor, allowing it to cool more of the room. Placed on the floor the cool air will mostly pool around the air conditioner and very little of the room will be cooled. Some air conditioner are actually placed relatively low in a room, but they have fans and baffles that blow the cold air upwards to the ceiling resulting in the same effect as placing the air conditioner high (maybe even better as the fan blows the cool air not only up to the ceiling but across it, possibly covering a larger volume of the room than cool air falling passively from an air conditioner placed high but without fans).
It depends on the BTU of the air coditioner, the cubic footage of space in the room to be cooled, and the temperature and humidity in the room. Under best conditions, an standard air conditioner can only cool a room to the mid 60's. Any colder than this causes the evaporator to ice over, clogging the air flow into the room, which causes the temperature to rise, even though the air conditioner is still running.
When you run on a normal cool or even cold day, when you have finished running you are hot. If it is hot to start with before your run, you are going to get hotter, hotter than running on a cool day.
Use Fudge Oomf conditioner in the same manner as an ordinary hair conditioner, following shampooing, with a dab of conditioner worked into hair, then rinsed with water. For even greater results it is recommended to follow-up with Oomf booster.
Use a Red Neck AC: One block of ice (or a metal bowl of ice cubes)--it take a substantial amount. Place a fan behind it. The air from the fan blowing over the ice will be cooled. Close up the room, and the cooled air will cool even further.
bad switch or vacuum leak
Yes it would and it would cause the a/c not to cool and even worse it can cause damage to the a/c unit as well.........
If the fan that is running is the radiator fan, this is nothing to be concerned with. Some vehicles have fans that will run even if the car is off. The fans run to cool the engine down. If it continues to run, the radiator fluid may need to be replaced. If the fan that is continually running is the heater/air conditioner fan, there is an issue with the switch that turns it on and off, or in the electrical system. This can be checked by a mechanic.
absolutely yes you can put your fighting fish in the water even without conditioner added I do it all the time, making sure the new water temp is the same as what I'm replacing, add water conditioner and you are good to go.
Could be running backwards....reverse the leads and see if it stays cool running the opposite direction.