Metals in an air conditioner usually include copper, aluminum, and steel:
copper in the wires and condenser coils, aluminum or steel fins across the coils, and a aluminum or steel case.
Scrap yards always take copper, but aluminum and steel acceptance varies, some won't take any painted metals.
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.
The undesired hot air needs to be put out of the room your trying to cool.
it is made up of iron, aluminum, metal coils on the inside, where air is cooled, and lastly it is made up of sheet metal.
A battery room may not require cooling, but it will require low humidity -- and for that you may need a cooling system or air conditioner.
Depending on whether the air conditioner is a "central operating unit" or if it is a "stand alone unit". The stand alone is an equipment purchase whereas a "central" is now part of the building.
Yes. They can be sold for scrap metal or they can be rebuilt.
Why is there humidity in the room when air conditioner is cooling? Room feels damp.
Room Air Conditioner...........
By bringing warm air outside the room
yes yes they can
A basic split air conditioner recirculates cool air in to the room.
A room air conditioner will being putting out a haze if the air contains high levels of humidity. The mixture of cold and warm air will produce visible water vapor.
If you are recycling scrap metal, It effects the environment in a very positive way! recycling aluminum scrap keeps 95% of the pollution caused by mining new aluminum out of the air!
How much space a room air conditioner can cool is dependent on the size of the unit. You can read the amount on the side of the box if you are not sure.
Buy an air conditioner. Another way is to put fans in the room and get the air circulating
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).