sgkane
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2015
- Posts
- 83
We were in Houston and the basement AC started making noise, which sounded very much like either a bad bearing or the squirrel cage was coming loose. Knowing that it wasn?t going to get any better and we were in Houston I had better get busy. I didn?t document the repairs because it?s been so well document in the Duner report (search ?Duner? on IRV2.com) .
Since we?ve owned this MH (little over a year) the AC has struggled especially when temps rose above 95 and when the temps hit 100 forget about it. I didn?t think that much of it because of what I?ve read here and elsewhere on the basement units and we?ve been talking about adding a roof top unit.
Not knowing exactly what I was going to find when we got the AC out, I ordered a new motor, fan and picked up a bearing at Grainger. Pulling out the unit went pretty much like it shows in the report with the foot notes at the end for our MH. What I found when we got it out surprised me. The AC pulls air from inside the bus through the coils and out to the ceiling duct work. Where the plastic duct for incoming air meets the unit is simply a compression fit with a foam seal. Nothing else holds it together other than the unit itself pushed against the seal. In our case that foam seal apparently had started to disintegrate over the years and that foam was being sucked in to the coils. With the exception of an area about the size of my fist the coils were completely blocked with sticky foam.
So in addition to the parts replacement that fixed the noise, I cleaned the cooling fins with a soft plastic brush and replaced the seals. What a HUGE difference. We are in Texas still and the temps have only been in the low 90?s but I can?t get over how much cooler and better airflow we now get. As for the noise it turned out to be just the bearing had gone bad but since I ordered all the parts everything got replaced.
I?m posting to mention that a poor producing basement AC unit might simply be plugged coils. You simply cannot see that side of the coils without removing the whole AC unit.
Since we?ve owned this MH (little over a year) the AC has struggled especially when temps rose above 95 and when the temps hit 100 forget about it. I didn?t think that much of it because of what I?ve read here and elsewhere on the basement units and we?ve been talking about adding a roof top unit.
Not knowing exactly what I was going to find when we got the AC out, I ordered a new motor, fan and picked up a bearing at Grainger. Pulling out the unit went pretty much like it shows in the report with the foot notes at the end for our MH. What I found when we got it out surprised me. The AC pulls air from inside the bus through the coils and out to the ceiling duct work. Where the plastic duct for incoming air meets the unit is simply a compression fit with a foam seal. Nothing else holds it together other than the unit itself pushed against the seal. In our case that foam seal apparently had started to disintegrate over the years and that foam was being sucked in to the coils. With the exception of an area about the size of my fist the coils were completely blocked with sticky foam.
So in addition to the parts replacement that fixed the noise, I cleaned the cooling fins with a soft plastic brush and replaced the seals. What a HUGE difference. We are in Texas still and the temps have only been in the low 90?s but I can?t get over how much cooler and better airflow we now get. As for the noise it turned out to be just the bearing had gone bad but since I ordered all the parts everything got replaced.
I?m posting to mention that a poor producing basement AC unit might simply be plugged coils. You simply cannot see that side of the coils without removing the whole AC unit.