about 75 to 100 dollars. depending on where you live and who you call
More information is needed to solve this problem. First, which coils ar freezing? (indoor or outdoor) Next, are coils clean and free from obstuction? Recommend clean all coils, visual inspection of compressor unit, and check freon charge level. Under charge can cause icing of indoor coils.
It seems like your coils are the main problem. I would suggest looking at professionals who best work with refrigerators, they can fix your coils and it will not damage your fridge.
First question would be did it ever work ok. If not it could be undersized or a repair is needed. Fuses, circuit breakers? Coils clean and filters clean?
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.
I would check the ignition timing and set it to the desired specifications. Next I would clean the throttle plate.
apply oil and then shampoo as it will make the scalp wet and clean
im a appliance delivery and repairman and the air condition is probably sitting too level or leaning forward and the condensation that builds from the coils being cold in the hot outside air cant run out the back of the drip pan on the bottom of a/c unit, so try tilting it back if that dont work the holes or seam crack could be clogged , and if all that fails then your regulator is putting out too much freon and your better off to purchase a new on and pay for the professional install and when they install it put a level on it and make sure it is leang toward the ground on the outside of window!
My suggestion would be to purchase leather cleaner and conditioner. Look at the directions on the label. God bless and happy cleaning :)
In the owners manual there should be a preventative maintanance guide. If not, call the store you bought it from and speak to a service technician. I would recommend cleaning the filter, usually by soaking it in water and then blowing out the coils with a compressor or some other type of higher pressure air. Since the air passes through the coils, the cleaner the better.
Yes it would cause your compressor needs that fan to cool down the refrigerant going through your condensing coils.. Without that fan it would cause high head pressure and damage the compressor as well..
Most of the coils fail when first purchased used. Or if you have taken it in for a detail. The dealers clean the engines and on many occasions, water has gotten into the coils, 1, 2, or 3, whatever. I would replace all at once if this is a problem. Hope this helped. M-
You can vacuum, blow or brush them clean. Just make sure that you don't bend the fins over. Hosing them out with water would probably make too much of a mess but it could work if you dismount the unit and carry it outside.