Yitahome has
12000 BTU 110V Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner with 20 SEER2 on sale for $719.99 - $273.59 off when you apply coupon code
AC0304 on the checkout page =
$446.40.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Staff Member
Izzy138 for sharing this deal.
About this product:
- Indoor unit: 31.2"W x 7.9"D x 11.5"H
- Outdoor unit: 27.8"W x 11"D x 20.9"H
- Coverage Area 750 Square Feet
- BTU Cooling 12000 BTU
- BTU Heating 12000 BTU
- Wattage 1400 W
- Voltage 115 V
- Minimum Temperature 60 °F
- Maximum Temperature 90 °F
- Dehumidifying 2.2 LBS/H
- Wi-Fi compatible
- Includes Installation Kit and Coolant
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Top Comments
Midea is one of the other MFGs that make some of the more known brands like Pioneer.
183 Comments
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But if you do that same process *except* you leave one or more line connections loose, you can connect a refrigerant can to the service port and remove the air via displacement and tighten the connections while doing so. It's wasteful, and kinda stupid, but I guess maybe it's faster and easier to grab a small can of refrigerant and a fill hose than lugging your pump and gauges, finding an extension cord, hooking it all up, waiting 10 minutes, disconnecting it all, and lugging everything back. I certainly wouldn't pay good money for someone to do it that way. Then again, I'd do it myself and not pay anyone any money.
I can't vouch much for their repitabilty but I have purchased R410A from them.
This person is explaining an away to "purge" line set with a very small amount of refrigerant. (not the best/legal practice).
Lack of consumer knowledge about these HVAC units and not having the EPA license to handle refrigerants leads to most of them lying to your face on issues with your central unit (which are becoming less and less reliable) so they can sell you a new $8-12k system (most houses in the south have 2), while a $1-200 part could fix it.
Most HVAC pros will balk at the mere idea of DIYing mini splits. But with YouTube university they're in for a rude awakening.
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I thought it uses nitrogen but according to Pioneer, it "Contains: 1,1-Difluoroethane which has zero ozone depletion potential and a very low global warming potential"
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I seen people put PVC on supply and exit line of those electric tankless water heaters on amazon which is dam near insanity. My buddy thinks he can DIY anything, did a water tank in his house, messed that up, blamed the unit, bought another one, messed that up too, on the 3rd tank, with the help of a real plumber got it right. Most people wasting their time. These no-name things pumped out of china just pure junk. I laugh when I hear "I DIY'd this heat pump, put a hole in my wall and dragged a 240v line too." Surely nothing can go wrong.
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