-64% $149.00
List Price: $409.99
Camel: Last few years price around $360 now new unit is $149.
Ship and sold by Amazon.
Emerson Quiet Kool 8000 Ashrae / 5000 BTU DOE Portable Air Conditioner with Dehumidifier and Remote Control, AC for Apartment, Bedroom, Medium Rooms up to 300 Sq. Ft. in White
https://www.amazon.com/Emerson-Qu...=UTF8&th=1
Of note: This item priced around $390 to $460 on Walmart, Home Depot and Best Buy.
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Something like this might work, but again it may make the door next to impossible to use when installed.
https://www.amazon.com/gulrear-Po...B0836VW7S7
If this was going to be long term use your best bet would be to replace the fixed window or install something like a dryer vent through the wall so you could use that as an exhaust. Wouldn't look terribly out of place if done well. This is assuming you aren't renting of course.
https://www.amazon.com/Through-Wa...B08LHDMYLJ
Something like this might work, but again it may make the door next to impossible to use when installed.
https://www.amazon.com/gulrear-Po...B0836VW7S7
If this was going to be long term use your best bet would be to replace the fixed window or install something like a dryer vent through the wall so you could use that as an exhaust. Wouldn't look terribly out of place if done well. This is assuming you aren't renting of course.
https://www.amazon.com/Through-Wa...B08LHDMYLJ
Thanks for the tip but unfortunately it's not a sliding door but a regular opening door.
Well that's what I was thinking. Can I attach it to the ac vent on the ceiling? Like the intake vent, not the out vents.
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Your goal would be to get the exhaust air outside of an occupied area but also that area should vent somewhat naturally. You would not want to exhaust into a dead box sheetrocked in on all sides because that might create moisture problems.
Please note, none of this is ideal, just workable. By design these units are designed to vent outside, I'm just talking workable alternatives even if they are technically wrong.
Your goal would be to get the exhaust air outside of an occupied area but also that area should vent somewhat naturally. You would not want to exhaust into a dead box sheetrocked in on all sides because that might create moisture problems.
Please note, none of this is ideal, just workable. By design these units are designed to vent outside, I'm just talking workable alternatives even if they are technically wrong.
Thanks. I guess I forgot to mention this is in case of a power outage so no central ac at night because the large 240v generator is too loud.
Single hose AC use air from in your house for the hot side condenser coils, then blow it out the exhaust hose. Yes it then blows air cooled by the other side around in the room it's in. But it's by nature creating suction into your house to exhaust it's own hot air (ACs aren't magic, they have to heat some air to cool other air). So it's pulling air from outdoors (presumably hotter) into your house as it runs. This can still do a good job of cooling a single room or part of a room, but it will never work as well as a dual hose unit (even ones that combine both hoses into an internally separated hose set) or a stationary dedicated AC like a window unit, central, or mini split. In a small room the effect can still be where the gets very nicely cooled, but it's burning a lot of extra energy basically fighting "itself" because it's also pulling in warmer air from outside the room. This is a worth it in a pinch price for limited or truly portable (like dragging it into a room for a couple hours for getting something done) use, but don't buy it instead of a window unit/etc for 24/7 use unless you're ready for what could be some high energy bills if you really need fairly steep cooling in a larger space.