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Split A/C doesn't blow cold (but condenser works)---help!

catalytic

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Jul 16, 2011
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636
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Boston, Los Angeles, Cleveland
I need some GarageJournal group wisdom.....

I'm (finally) traveling for the summer and currently in a nice rental with a new-ish split A/C system. It is correctly set to 'cool' and the thermostat is set to the lowest, but it only blows air that is exactly room temp. On the outside of the house, I can see that the compressor/condenser unit fan is running and condensation is dripping out at a good/normal pace.

-I cleaned the air filters (which looked fine)
-I turned it off and on at the breaker
-if I turn up the thermostat, it automatically turns the fan speed down, and the fan speed increases again when I turn the temp down (so I think the thermostat is OK)
-I tried turning it off and leaving it for 5 hours. Still no joy when turned back on.

The owners are clueless, and it's going to be 95° tomorrow 🥵---if you have ideas about this, I'd really appreciate it.
 
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Awag

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Aug 27, 2019
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SE NE
There should not be condensation dripping outside. That should be dripping inside. Is it a heatpump and stuck in reverse flow for heating?
 

pattenp

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Jun 4, 2008
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Virginia - USA
I think he saying that the condensate line is dripping which should be exiting outside.
 
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OP
C

catalytic

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Jul 16, 2011
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Boston, Los Angeles, Cleveland
There should not be condensation dripping outside. That should be dripping inside. Is it a heatpump and stuck in reverse flow for heating?

I think he saying that the condensate line is dripping which should be existing outside.
^^ I meant to say that when I look at the compressor/condenser unit, which is outside, there is condensation dripping from its drain line. That may just be where the drain line from the indoor unit comes out---I'm not sure. But the fact that there is condensation dripping means that something must be getting cold, right? I thought that if there was no refrigerant, then there would be no condensation (?).

I believe it is a combo heat+A/C unit, though when I set it to heating mode nothing happens inside (it stops blowing air).

Maybe the refrigerant is not pumping/circulating back to the indoor unit?
 
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Viper98912

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Oct 20, 2012
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GA
Might not have any refrigerant in it. Owners need to call the service person to do the diagnostic. This is not your responsibility as a renter. There's probably a law in your state that says you can withhold rent payment if your landlord is not providing adequate accommodations (which in this case, no A/C during a dangerous heatwave could constitute that....)
 
OP
C

catalytic

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Messages
636
Location
Boston, Los Angeles, Cleveland
Might not have any refrigerant in it. Owners need to call the service person to do the diagnostic. This is not your responsibility as a renter. There's probably a law in your state that says you can withhold rent payment if your landlord is not providing adequate accommodations (which in this case, no A/C during a dangerous heatwave could constitute that....)
It's actually a rental home in the Alps (finally a vacation!). It's otherwise great (including a garage with a bunch of rebranded Knipex no less!), and there aren't many alternatives nearby, so I hope to get this fixed. They're sending the installer out today or tomorrow, but I'd also like to solve it myself if I can---from talking to the owners, I suspect it may have been in "no cool air/fan only" mode since it was installed, so the installer may be an idiot.
 

bluedog225

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Jan 31, 2012
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Texas
Yeah. Needs to be evacuated, leak tested, and new refrigerant weighted in. Be interesting to see if the Swiss techs are all that.
 

Viper98912

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GA
It's actually a rental home in the Alps (finally a vacation!). It's otherwise great (including a garage with a bunch of rebranded Knipex no less!), and there aren't many alternatives nearby, so I hope to get this fixed. They're sending the installer out today or tomorrow, but I'd also like to solve it myself if I can---from talking to the owners, I suspect it may have been in "no cool air/fan only" mode since it was installed, so the installer may be an idiot.
Well in that case yes, hopefully they can get it fixed quickly
 

motterpaul

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Aug 25, 2020
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Location
CA
Feel the copper line sets outside. The small one should feel much colder to the touch than the big one. If not, it is low on coolant (assuming it is a mini-split). If there is ice on the pipe it is also low on coolant. The fastest/cheapest fix is to call someone with sealant and R410a to pump the system up, but a real long-term diagnostic fix would be much more extensive and costly. The owners should pay for it either way.
 

Jim greengo

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Sep 3, 2018
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Behind my house
Feel the copper line sets outside. The small one should feel much colder to the touch than the big one. If not, it is low on coolant (assuming it is a mini-split). If there is ice on the pipe it is also low on coolant. The fastest/cheapest fix is to call someone with sealant and R410a to pump the system up, but a real long-term diagnostic fix would be much more extensive and costly. The owners should pay for it either way.
Theres more than 1 reason a system can ice up ,not just being low on freon.
Pumping a system full of stop leak is generally not a good idea,find the leak and fix it.
 

motterpaul

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99
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CA
Theres more than 1 reason a system can ice up ,not just being low on freon.
Pumping a system full of stop leak is generally not a good idea,find the leak and fix it.

Yeah, for the owners. In this case, the OP is at a short-term rental in the Alps.
 
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