NO!!!!!!! you should never never never never never never never never never never never never never never ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever cover up an out-side AC-unit because it could eisly catch fire and EXPLODE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes you can. I see mobiles in my park with window units, rooftop units and outside ground level units.
It is the surface area of the solid.
AC units are cool and will cause water to condense. They have an outlet tube that leads to the outside. The water should drain to the outside. If the water leaks to the inside, then the drain tube to the outside is clogged up and needs to become unclogged.
surface area
If the "humidity odor" was not present before the AC was installed then it probally comes from water building up on the evaporator coils but not draining properly outside. AC units remove water from the air and discharge it outside. If it does not drain then it will turn back into water at the AC unit, stagnate and create an odor. Hope that helps.
The easiest way to cool an older home that heated with radiators, is to use window AC units. Storing these window AC units during the winter can be a lot of work. What is are some suggestions for properly storing window AC units during the winter?
do you have a heat pump? are you running unit in heat? if so and the steam is comming from outside unit, this is normal in the units defrost cycle
Air conditioners
You would have to address that query to Trane. -I see many different air conditioners in mobiles, roof units, window units and outside ground based units, so obviously many AC's are approved.
It probably does- you just do not see it. Newer AC units have a "slinger" fan. Condensed water is caught by the outside fan, and blown into droplets. This eliminates the trickle of water dribbling from the AC.
If AC = 10 units and D is the midpoint of AC then AD = AC/2 = 5 units!
RV AC units are interchangeable. This is true as long as you replace the whole unit and not just one part.