drain is clogged. or there a hole in drain pan.
The evaporator coil is probably frozen. Shut off the outdoor unit and run the fan only until it thaws out. Then call the service man and tell him what you did, there is no point in paying him to stand around while the ice melts and there is nothing he can diagnose until the ice is gone.
If it's blowing intake-temperature air, either you've got the fan alone switched on or the heating part isn't working for some reason. If it's a gas furnace, the pilot light may have gone out, or the gas may be shut off somewhere (at the furnace itself, at the emergency shutoff for the house, or possibly at the main inlet). If it's blowing actually COLD air (colder than intake), then you've probably got central air and you've somehow managed to turn on the air conditioner.
Generators can be used to power many electrical appliances in a house during a power outage. Depending on what size you have, a generator can power a refrigerator, oven, lights, even an air conditioner.
Depends on a lot of factors including but not limited to the Humidity of the air and the size of the unit. One of my co-workers has an new high efficiency air conditioner for a house about 2500 square feet and he gets more than 20 gallons a day. By contrast I have a very small house with a dehumidifier in the basement and I got about 2.5 gallons a day. I was hoping to save my dying lawn with the water from the sir conditioner but its just not enough.
Hard to say it really depends on your home. One thing it will do if you have a filtration system in your furnace will ensure you have cleaner air blowing through the house.
In a house with a central air conditioner, the heat from the upstairs is removed by the evaporator coil in the air handler unit. The heat is transferred to the refrigerant and expelled outside of the house through the condenser unit. The cooled air is then circulated back into the upstairs living space.
A home air conditioner works by drawing in warm air from inside the house, passing it over cold evaporator coils to remove heat, and then blowing the cooled air back into the room. The removed heat is transferred outside through the condenser coils, and the refrigerant in the system circulates to facilitate the heat exchange process. This cycle continues until the desired temperature is reached inside the house.
so its not blowing at all anymore, as in no air at all? if tahts the case then how do you know its still cold. if it isn't blowing as well you may just need to change out your filter, just like in a house all cars(most)have a air conditioner filter. if its not blowing anymore at all it sounds like your compressor or your whole dam motor went out, take it to shop.
Where is the evaporator coil located? >>>> Drain line is probably clogged
The compressor and condenser are usually located on the outside air portion of the air conditioner. The evaporator is located on the inside the house, sometimes as part of a furnace. That's the part that heats your house. The working fluid arrives at the compressor as a cool, low-pressure gas.
I can see no reason why not .
THE REFRIGERATION CYCLE SIMPLY MOVES HEAT FROM ONE POINT (EVAPORATOR) TO ANOTHER POINT (CONDENSER). THE HEAT BEING REMOVED FROM INSIDE THE HOUSE IS TRANSFERRED TO THE OUTSIDE VIA THIS PROCESS. lc
Is the ac off at the thermostat or did the outdoor unit fail on something? If off at the stat the problem is with the blower or the stat (is the fan set to On rather than Auto), if not off at the stat the problem is outside.
the answer is air conditioner
Depending on what you need the AC service for, it can cost anywhere from $100 to over $400 for just a house call. Blowing the drain of your AC out can cost around $150. Prices will vary by company as well.
If the air conditioner is on but not cooling the house properly, you may have a leak in your duct work. A leak would allow all of the cold air to escape, blowing into the outdoors instead of cooling your house.
A powerful full house air conditioner unit will cost in the range of 1500 to 2000 dollars.