Because the amount of water vapour that the air can carry before condensation occurs varies with temperature. If you take hot humid air aind cool it down some of that humidity will drop out as condensation - turn into water.
Just as a cold can of coke will bead moisture, so does the cool surfaces of the AC unit.
None that come to mind.
Find the source of the water and correct it.
Unclog the drain.
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.
no ofcourse not water would just dry off even if it does not or does come from the AC
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.
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.
Just as a cold can of coke will bead moisture, so does the cool surfaces of the AC unit.
A clogged AC drain can cause water leakage.
No, AC water is not safe to drink as it may contain harmful contaminants and bacteria.
Water condensates on the cold condenser coils of the ac; just like water condensates on the outside of your cold drink on a hot day. If your ac does not drain this water properly it will leak.
If it is water, it could be a plugged up AC condensation drain or if it is engine coolant, it could be a leaky heater core.
Only with considerable difficulty. You're probably better off to trade your car in for one with AC.
Yes, hard to believe but DX is a base model and has no AC
i cant get ac from my panel vent on a 1989 caddillac fleetwood brougham
Yes, it comes with an small AC adaptor