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Inside the unit under the evaporator coil. The condensate drain line is attached to it.
A window a/c is a self-contained unit. The condensor, evaporator and compressor are all in the unit. A split system is the common central air unit you see on most homes. The evaporator coil is located at the furnace withe the system fan, while the compressor and condensing coil are outside the house. This is a simple explaination, but I .
If the old unit was a 10 SEER or less. If the old indoor coil has an expansion valve you should be fine but if it has an orifice type metering device then it should be replaced
clean coil on outside and check freon levelstopped up coil will cause this problem
A "coil" is a length of copper or aluminum tubing that has been wrapped or folded into a compact package. A refrigerant gas, such as Freon or ammonia, is pumped through the coil by the compressor. Air is blown past the turns of a coil to absorb or reject heat. There are two coils in an air conditioning unit, or any refrigeration unit, for that matter -- an evaporator coil inside (gets cold) and a condenser coil outside (gets hot).
the aircondition fan is located in the outside unit of a central AC unit. It sucks outside cool air thru the fins and tubing that contains heat from air collected from inside the house thru the A-coil that's sitting on top of your heating unit. The inside fan in the heating unit blows air thru the cold air moving thru the fins and tubing in your A-coil and blows that air into your house. If you hold your hand above the outside unit while the fan is running you can feel the hot air that's coming from inside, this is how the heat is removed.
Yes it does.
some were
The arithmentic logic unit (ALU) and the control unit are located inside the central processing unit (CPU).
If you are running your central heating/air conditioner unit to cool your home, moisture will condense on the cooling coil inside the unit and should drain out to the outside or will be pumped out. This will lower the humidity in your house. The question is to vague, but I suspect a coil pan leaking 90% or better furnaces are also condensing and generate water.
You do not need to pump the system down just to clean the coil unless you are planning to remove the coil completely from the unit.
The outdoor portion of the central ac unit is what gives up the heat from indoors, so it has to be outside. For a more thorough explanation see the question: How does air conditioning work.