re: The home / office air-conditioner thread Quote:
Originally Posted by diyguy Do you have the Ac electrical wiring on the east wall? You might be able to get the copper through the PVC on the north wall by joining rather than bending, if you find a good installer. Same way that one would join the pipe to the IDU. |
Getting the electrical wiring on the east wall is not a problem. My electrician told me he can do this easily. Re-routing the electrical wires is easier and less risky than finding a skilled installer who can use the set up on the north wall. Quote:
Originally Posted by Guite graaja,
Your alternate solution seems more workable. Your last photo could have shown more towards RHS and towards top of photo. The point where you plan to drill hole may not necessarily come out on the tile structure, it may be below on the wall itself. You can also make an assessment to try to come out below tile structure. You indoor unit level will be low but not too low because it looks like you have a very high ceiling.
If indeed the hole has to come out of the tile structure you have to perfectly align two holes (one on the wall, one on the tile roof) across what looks like a triangular void. Ensure that the hole on the tile roof is lower because your AC drain has to flow by gravity. Put a PVC pipe to connect these two holes, flush / align the pipe tip on the inside, stick out a little bit pipe on the outside. Sticking out the pipe beyond the tile on the outside will help in water sealing the gap between pipe and tile structure.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Guite |
Thanks Guite. I checked out if the hole can be brought out of the tile structure. If I have to do this, the AC will have to be located very low at around 6 to 7 feet which will not be good either. So, it has to be through the tile structure. I am talking to many people (my builder, electrician etc) to find out someone who can make the required holes on the concrete structure and the wall. Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaggu Go for the alternate solution, remove one tile and use a large concreted drill bit to make a hole. Our house also one AC was installed in a similar manner, the installer came with a 1.5 or 2 inch drill bit and got the hole done in 15 mts  |
Thanks Jaggu for the info. It is good to know that this has been done before and all that remains now is for me to find the right guy to do this! Quote:
Originally Posted by Thad E Ginathom What a shame that the channel was included, but the planning didn't make it actually useable. Very frustrating for you, graaja. |
You are absolutely right. I was under the impression that it would be an easy job fitting the AC with the provision in place - no holes, no patch up, no paint job. Now that I know this setup is totally useless, I am totally frustrated. The same provision has been done in two rooms (one on the ground floor and one on the first floor). Except for the ugly look, they serve no purpose now Quote:
Originally Posted by vnabhi In addition, please remember that the external unit will need maintenance in the long run (I recently had to get gas filled), so having easy access to the unit by service personnel is of paramount importance. |
Thanks vnabhi. That is a very useful point which could save lot of trouble in the future. Having the external unit on the east wall will provide a very easy ccess. Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy The internal elbow can be done away with. Cut the wall here and cut the elbow out. The installer will braze a copper elbow here.
For external elbow, again cut the elbow out and route the pipe straight through. A copper elbow will be brazed (as in case of the internal bend) and rest of the copper pipe routed where you want it to be.
This is a standard procedure in all the building we construct. |
Thanks Aroy. Cutting the internal elbow is not a problem. But to cut the external elbow we have to break the tile structure and as this is about 20 feet above ground, it is a very difficult task. Also, as vnabhi mentioned only the installation to the east side wall will provide an easy access to the external unit.
Thank you all for your inputs. The Team BHP membership is proving to be worth every attempt I made to become a member  |