Keep wine tasting wonderful with this Arctic King 34-Bottle Wine Cooler. It comes in a sleek black color and has an LED display and touch controls that make it easy to keep favorite wines at the ideal drinking temperature. This Arctic King premium wine cooler is a unit that employs compressor chilling technology for faster cooling speed, high cooling efficiency and stable temperature control. This cooler features a see-through glass door and interior LED to display a collection and add to the style. The glass door wine cooler includes slide-out shelves that make it simple to select just the right bottle for the occasion. The configuration of the shelves permits chilling up to 34 wine bottles lying on their sides. Utilize this Arctic King 34-Bottle Wine Cooler at home or in restaurant and hotel settings to offer wine to guests at parties and on special occasions.
Manufacturer:
Midea
Product SKU:
737222365
UPC:
817986020898
Community Notes
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
They're more than 10x the price of this unit. Like telling the Nissan Versa folks they should go with an Audi R8.
Anyways, wine fridges supply sort of dried up early in Covid times and previous revolving door deals came to a halt. I was tired of waiting and ordered an Ivation unit about a week ago... Glad to see wine deals back.
If you want to give soldering a shot, you may just have some busted capacitors.
ah.. that's a great idea. i didn't think about that. i'll give that a whirl. right now it's stuck at 62-65 degrees floating and won't go lower than that.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank F___
For those worrying about quality, this is actually a Midea Brand. Someone posted a comment (removed as unhelpful) comparing GE Profile to this unit. A quick search comparing the two brands found a comparison of window A/C units. Here's the ratings provided to somewhat address brand quality issues:
Worst Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Hisense
2. TCL
3. Keystone
4. GE - GE Profile PHC08LY
5. Frigidaire
Best Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Midea
Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape
Midea U-shaped MAW08V1QWT
The Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape is the highest-rated window air conditioning system on Consumer Reports. The unit does have a remote control, electronic controls with a built-in timer, and an auto fan speed. It also has a dirty filter indicator and even directional control. It also has a British Thermal Units per hour (BTU/HR) of 12,000 and an Energy Efficiency Rating (EER) of 15.
The Midea models were effective at cooling and whisper-quiet at low speeds for a larger unit. High speeds were louder but not intolerable. There was no significant drop in performance in extreme heat and under low voltage drops.
So this may or may not be junk, but Midea is definitely working on their brand quality.
For those worrying about quality, this is actually a Midea Brand. Someone posted a comment (removed as unhelpful) comparing GE Profile to this unit. A quick search comparing the two brands found a comparison of window A/C units. Here's the ratings provided to somewhat address brand quality issues:
Worst Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Hisense
2. TCL
3. Keystone
4. GE - GE Profile PHC08LY
5. Frigidaire
Best Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Midea
Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape
Midea U-shaped MAW08V1QWT
The Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape is the highest-rated window air conditioning system on Consumer Reports. The unit does have a remote control, electronic controls with a built-in timer, and an auto fan speed. It also has a dirty filter indicator and even directional control. It also has a British Thermal Units per hour (BTU/HR) of 12,000 and an Energy Efficiency Rating (EER) of 15.
The Midea models were effective at cooling and whisper-quiet at low speeds for a larger unit. High speeds were louder but not intolerable. There was no significant drop in performance in extreme heat and under low voltage drops.
So this may or may not be junk, but Midea is definitely working on their brand quality.
To be fair, I have absolutely heard of midea ACs particularly because of the u-shaped design, but had no idea that they made anything else. So I am not sure if that's a great comparison.
how to prevent this from crapping out? i had the smaller version of this previously and even hooked it up to a surge protector, but after a couple PG&E flex alert power outage last year, it no longer hold it's temp and no support from the company other than need to buy a new computer board or new fridge.
Where did you place this? Since this doesn't have front exhaust, it shouldn't be too close against the wall under a counter top. You need side clearance as well. Personally I would not get any sort of cooler or refrigerator without front exhaust.
1
Like
Helpful
Funny
Not helpful
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Keep in mind the temp range is 5C (41F) at its lowest… so if you're looking to convert this into a dry ager for meats- it will not work.
i have a different fridge that also goes down to 41. i've been meaning/wanting to disable the temp control and plug the unit into one of those outlets with a programmable temp sesnor (just need to get the sensor inside the fridge body) and let the outlet control the compressor going on/off. i've seen reviews on similar units where people do the same so as to get it to work below 41F
It would, but depends on what temp you want to keep them at. This unit doesn't heat, so keep that in mind (the addition of the heating aspect is generally what makes the electric cigar humidors so expensive).
That being said, if it's in your house that's set at 70 and you keep this at 64, it should work to keep them at a constant temp. My house is pretty consistent at around 68 with low humidity, so I don't worry about a fridge for them. But I've definitely thought about it.
Last edited by clarkkent06 July 21, 2022 at 11:54 AM.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
Anyways, wine fridges supply sort of dried up early in Covid times and previous revolving door deals came to a halt. I was tired of waiting and ordered an Ivation unit about a week ago... Glad to see wine deals back.
Sprite -- Yes
Ice Cubes -- Not so much
46 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank F___
Worst Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Hisense
2. TCL
3. Keystone
4. GE - GE Profile PHC08LY
5. Frigidaire
Best Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Midea
Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape
Midea U-shaped MAW08V1QWT
The Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape is the highest-rated window air conditioning system on Consumer Reports. The unit does have a remote control, electronic controls with a built-in timer, and an auto fan speed. It also has a dirty filter indicator and even directional control. It also has a British Thermal Units per hour (BTU/HR) of 12,000 and an Energy Efficiency Rating (EER) of 15.
The Midea models were effective at cooling and whisper-quiet at low speeds for a larger unit. High speeds were louder but not intolerable. There was no significant drop in performance in extreme heat and under low voltage drops.
So this may or may not be junk, but Midea is definitely working on their brand quality.
Link to full article if you care:
https://homeinspectioni
Worst Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Hisense
2. TCL
3. Keystone
4. GE - GE Profile PHC08LY
5. Frigidaire
Best Window Air Conditioner Brands
1. Midea
Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape
Midea U-shaped MAW08V1QWT
The Midea MAW12V1QWT u-shape is the highest-rated window air conditioning system on Consumer Reports. The unit does have a remote control, electronic controls with a built-in timer, and an auto fan speed. It also has a dirty filter indicator and even directional control. It also has a British Thermal Units per hour (BTU/HR) of 12,000 and an Energy Efficiency Rating (EER) of 15.
The Midea models were effective at cooling and whisper-quiet at low speeds for a larger unit. High speeds were louder but not intolerable. There was no significant drop in performance in extreme heat and under low voltage drops.
So this may or may not be junk, but Midea is definitely working on their brand quality.
Link to full article if you care:
https://homeinspectioni
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
That being said, if it's in your house that's set at 70 and you keep this at 64, it should work to keep them at a constant temp. My house is pretty consistent at around 68 with low humidity, so I don't worry about a fridge for them. But I've definitely thought about it.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment