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Charlie S. August 14th 05 12:52 AM

Air Conditioner Setting
 
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent setting
that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept it on the
'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would prevent air from
re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep the room cooler. But,
then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off? When would you choose
one over other?



Curly Sue August 14th 05 01:09 AM

On Sat, 13 Aug 2005 23:52:10 GMT, "Charlie S."
wrote:

Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent setting
that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept it on the
'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would prevent air from
re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep the room cooler. But,
then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off? When would you choose
one over other?


With "exhaust" you're blowing the air you paid to cool outside. I
suspect that setting is best used if you are using the "fan only"
setting on the unit. Eg. if it's cooler outside than inside and you
want to draw in fresh air from outside through doors and windows.

With the closed setting, it won't be any more stale than if the doors
and windows were closed and the AC was off.

Sue(tm)
Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself!

Stormin Mormon August 14th 05 02:25 AM

The couple AC I've worked on, I can't remember if the vent blows air from
inside to the outside, or from outside in.

"recirculating to the outside" is a built in contradiction. Recirc means
inside air goes inside. "vent to the outside" might be closer.

I candidly don't think it makes enough difference to care. If the air gets
stale, open the door more often.

--

Christopher A. Young
Do good work.
It's longer in the short run
but shorter in the long run.
..
..


"Charlie S." wrote in message
news:KIvLe.407$I56.131@trndny06...
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent setting
that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept it on the
'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would prevent air from
re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep the room cooler. But,
then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off? When would you choose
one over other?




Edwin Pawlowski August 14th 05 03:06 AM


"Charlie S." wrote in message
news:KIvLe.407$I56.131@trndny06...
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent
setting that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept
it on the 'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would
prevent air from re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep
the room cooler. But, then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off?
When would you choose one over other?



Real answer: It does not matter.

The vents on these things are too small to make a difference. Why do they
have them? Marketing.

When our company had to modify tooling for a part we made for a major AC
company to accommodate a "fresh air" model I asked the engineer about it.
His reply: "Totally useless, but the competition has it so we have to also."
--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/



Dr. Hardcrab August 14th 05 04:12 AM


"Charlie S." wrote in message
news:KIvLe.407$I56.131@trndny06...
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent
setting that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept
it on the 'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would
prevent air from re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep
the room cooler. But, then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off?
When would you choose one over other?



Yes....



Pete R August 14th 05 06:05 AM

"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message ...

"Charlie S." wrote in message
news:KIvLe.407$I56.131@trndny06...
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent
setting that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept
it on the 'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would
prevent air from re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep
the room cooler. But, then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off?
When would you choose one over other?



Real answer: It does not matter.

The vents on these things are too small to make a difference. Why do they
have them? Marketing.

When our company had to modify tooling for a part we made for a major AC
company to accommodate a "fresh air" model I asked the engineer about it.
His reply: "Totally useless, but the competition has it so we have to also."


Different A/C units have different size exhaust vents. You can
tell how big yours is by simply noting the change in airflow from
the unit between its closed and exhaust settings. If there's little
or no change, the exhaust vent is indeed too small and isn't
making any difference.

We have a basic Frigidaire model and there's a major difference
in how fast our apartment cools down when we leave the A/C
on exhaust for several minutes when we first turn it on.



TURTLE August 15th 05 03:28 AM


"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
...

"Charlie S." wrote in message
news:KIvLe.407$I56.131@trndny06...
Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent setting
that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept it on the
'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would prevent air from
re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep the room cooler. But,
then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off? When would you choose one
over other?



Real answer: It does not matter.

The vents on these things are too small to make a difference. Why do they
have them? Marketing.

When our company had to modify tooling for a part we made for a major AC
company to accommodate a "fresh air" model I asked the engineer about it. His
reply: "Totally useless, but the competition has it so we have to also."
--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/


This is Turtle.

To Edwin and OP Charlie ,

Years ago with a big S , I spoke to a Whirlpool Rep. as to why the Fresh air
option was on the window units. There was 2 reasons as to having it.

1] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : If you staied in a small
room for 12 hours and the room was air tight. You could die from lack of oxygen
for you will breath it all up without get more fresh air in the room.

2] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : In some parts of the
country where you have low humidity conditions like 15% RH all the time. the Air
conditioner will even lower this 15% RH down to maybe 5% RH or so and some
people will have real bad Nose Bleeding at this very low Humidity condition. So
they bring in fresh air in to keep the Fresh air up and some of the humidity
level up too. Now anybody in high Humidity parts of the country , it is of no
use to run the Fresh air option at all for the humidity will always stay up like
in Louisiana. Then there would only be the fresh air problem but most people
open a door to a room every 8 to 12 hours.

So in Very Low Humidity areas of the country this option may be of use but in
high humidity areas of the country. It has very little useful purpose .

TURTLE



Edwin Pawlowski August 15th 05 03:53 AM


"TURTLE" wrote in message
1] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : If you staied in a
small room for 12 hours and the room was air tight. You could die from
lack of oxygen for you will breath it all up without get more fresh air in
the room.

2] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : In some parts of the
country where you have low humidity conditions like 15% RH all the time.
the Air conditioner will even lower this 15% RH down to maybe 5% RH or so
and some people will have real bad Nose Bleeding at this very low Humidity
condition.


I agree with you in theory, but in practice, it just does not work that way.
Take a look at the opening size of the FA vent. Maybe 15 years ago, they
were large enough to actually make a difference, but today they do not. The
unit we made the scroll plates for had 1/2 of a square inch (0.5") vent.
Doubt it would remove much of a fart.



TURTLE August 15th 05 05:57 AM


"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
. ..

"TURTLE" wrote in message
1] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : If you staied in a
small room for 12 hours and the room was air tight. You could die from lack
of oxygen for you will breath it all up without get more fresh air in the
room.

2] To bring in fresh air to a room from outdoors : In some parts of the
country where you have low humidity conditions like 15% RH all the time. the
Air conditioner will even lower this 15% RH down to maybe 5% RH or so and
some people will have real bad Nose Bleeding at this very low Humidity
condition.


I agree with you in theory, but in practice, it just does not work that way.
Take a look at the opening size of the FA vent. Maybe 15 years ago, they were
large enough to actually make a difference, but today they do not. The unit
we made the scroll plates for had 1/2 of a square inch (0.5") vent. Doubt it
would remove much of a fart.


This is Turtle.

All you need to do was change the air in a small room every 12 to 18 hours of
run time. We are not talking much air as a small room change out in a half a day
of run time. Now as far as being of use in my part of the country where we have
100 % RH all the time and are useless.

TURTLE



Tekkie® August 16th 05 12:28 AM

Charlie S. posted for all of us...
I don't top post - see either inline or at bottom.

Have an Amana air conditioner. Probably 7 years old. It has a vent setting
that can be set at either 'Closed' or 'Exhaust'. I've always kept it on the
'Exhaust' setting. I would guess the Closed setting would prevent air from
re-circulating from outside. And, would probably keep the room cooler. But,
then you would have stagnant air. Is my logic off? When would you choose
one over other?



Yes, how much do fart?
--

Tekkie


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