Just as a cold can of coke will bead moisture, so does the cool surfaces of the AC unit.
The A/C extracts water from the air.
This is water that has condensed out of the room air on the evaporator coils of the air conditioner, and it is completely normal. If the humidity is high, one will see more water condensing and dripping from the air conditioner than when the room air is dry.
It is a haier/g.e. air conditioner Model no.ast05lks1 serial no.vl271648
When you cool hot air, water condenses out of it. This water should be piped to the outside of the air conditioner unit and drained away outside. It is possible that the drain pipe is blocked.
When air is cooled the water in it comes out (like mist forming on the outside of a class filled with cold coke) and this happens in the air conditioner. Normally the dripping water is drained way to the outside (or a drain) by a pipe. If the pipe gets blocked the water will overflow and the conditioner will leak water - get it serviced.
That is condensation and it is normal for water to come out of an air conditioner in the back of it.
Your air conditioner may be faulty if it is not dripping water.
I have seen this where water has leaked into the ductwork and stagnated.
The A/C extracts water from the air.
The air conditioner condenses water from the air. If the air conditioner is not draining correctly this water will spray though the system. Water and moisture are needed to support mould growth. You need to clean and repair your air conditioner drain system.
The AC system doesn't use water. Water may be produced at the evaporator as a result of the rapid exchange of heat to the ambient air, but there is no water in an AC system.
fair chance the drain hose for the a/c has come out of where it is supposed to plug in.
Drop the temp on the thermostat.
perhaps it is water from the air conditioner, sometimes the drain hoses come loose.
The York Air Conditioner that will not come on after it makes a humming sound then stops might have an issue with the electrical current going to the machine. It is possible that the fan is also the culprit. The fan has to come on before the air conditioner can operate properly.
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This is water that has condensed out of the room air on the evaporator coils of the air conditioner, and it is completely normal. If the humidity is high, one will see more water condensing and dripping from the air conditioner than when the room air is dry.