Kevin Olson wrote:
Recently, Midea and one other brand have come out with mini splits which can be inserted into an appropriately sized single hung window. They will both heat and cool, and require no (or very minimal) modifications.
We have a small (8,000 or 10,000 BTU, I forget which; it's the medium sized model) Midea window AC unit, which we run a few nights per summer, installed in the smallest of our bedroom windows, with a cloth shower curtain on a spring tension curtain rod across our bedroom doorway. This arrangement means that the AC unit really only needs to cool our bedroom, give or take a bit of leakage at the curtain. A good night's sleep can make all the difference in hot, steamy weather. Ours has a variable speed compressor, and all sorts of modes and settings, some of which are more energy efficient than the basic "cool" mode. The evaporator is on the interior of the sash, and the condenser is outside. Both heat exchangers have fans, and are connected via tubing which passes under the slightly raised sash through a small flat connecting housing. A folding metal bracket supports the overhung weight of the exterior portion. There are some foam blocks which provide a customizable seal at the sides of the unit.
If the Midea mini splits are anything like the quality of the AC unit we have (and the ancient but still very functional dehumidifier we have, also Midea manufactured, though with some private label marketing badge on the front), the mini splits will be long lived. I haven't actually seen one in person, but it seems they could really be helpful for someone who absolutely cannot modify their residential accommodations.
In the case of our AC unit, I did screw in two very small screws for the folding support bracket, one at each side of the frame, but these aren't strictly necessary, though it does seem like good insurance against the bracket slipping out of position. Otherwise, it is a no modifications install. I believe the mini splits are set up the same, but the heat pump setting does require a higher performance refrigeration circuit than the AC only version, since it's an air source heat pump. It would also suffer from the same weaknesses as any other air source heat pump; that is, when the outdoor temperature drops, the heat pump will need to work harder, and therefor will be less efficient, to provide the same heating as when the exterior temps are less cold.
Don't take this as a recommendation. As I said, I don't have direct experience with the mini splits, just with the Midea AC unit and dehumidifier. Take this as a "might be worth investigating".
These mini splits are also uncheap (roughly 10X the cost of the AC units, as I recall), so that might factor into how desirable a solution this might be.
Well, is my face RED (my neck is always red)! I just checked, and it isn't Midea who has the window mini split after all! It's Gradient, and they may not even have a consumer-ready product, yet.
I am leaving this post up as a monument to my everlasting shame, for not having checked before posting, but rather just going on my memory.
Some people's kids!
Jay Angler wrote:
Pearl Sutton started an excellent thread expanding on this concept: https://permies.com/t/187318/Adding-Heating-Zones-HouseTimothy Norton wrote: One of the best things we can do is make it difficult for it to slip away and you can do that by closing interior doors.
Installing interior drapes where there aren't doors to close is inexpensive and quick. This also allows some air movement which is important in damp climates like mine where there is danger of closed rooms going moldy!
Chi Monger wrote:
HEATPUMP MINISPLITS:
…
But for refrigerant?…
…Yes, they all (we entertained several contractors giving free estimates) …basically said it WILL leak (must have annual maintenance, incl. check refrigerant levels—of course that is another income-stream to the companies greedy for more profits).
Kelly Craig wrote:Where I was grew up, enclosed porches were common on the older houses. Many were unheated. Others were heated just enough to keep things that would be damaged by it from freezing. That porch buffer made a big difference in heating our old farmhouse home heated by nothing but a wood furnace in the basement.
This is very true! Particularly sliding glass doors. Any "glass" that's at a height where it can get kicked, is made substantially thicker than regular window glass.Kelly Craig wrote:...either way, I'd be wise to beef up the 4x6 supports below, just because glass is heavier than people think.
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Kelly Craig wrote:Yeah, Kevin, my dream home would have a wrap around deck using old sliding glass doors. In the summer, they could all be open in the summer and, in the winter, not so much.
It'd be fun to glass etch them, just because I can. As I pointed out to wifey, it would look nice, and could all be done for a few hundred dollars (sand and contact paper is all you need). It would cost a fortune to have someone do it, but, as long as the projector bulb doesn't burn out, I gots me some talent and could do mountains, elk and whatever tickles fancies.
If a person wanted to get creative, some of the sliders could be framed to roll out of the way, to open the space even more.
If worse came to worse, I could save the five sliders I'm removing (two down, three to go) and just lay them sideways on the short walls/openings, as if windows (either way, I'd be wise to beef up the 4x6 supports below, just because glass is heavier than people think.
Kelly Craig wrote:Yeah, Kevin, my dream home would have a wrap around deck using old sliding glass doors. In the summer, they could all be open in the summer and, in the winter, not so much.
It'd be fun to glass etch them, just because I can. As I pointed out to wifey, it would look nice, and could all be done for a few hundred dollars (sand and contact paper is all you need). It would cost a fortune to have someone do it, but, as long as the projector bulb doesn't burn out, I gots me some talent and could do mountains, elk and whatever tickles fancies.
If a person wanted to get creative, some of the sliders could be framed to roll out of the way, to open the space even more.
If worse came to worse, I could save the five sliders I'm removing (two down, three to go) and just lay them sideways on the short walls/openings, as if windows (either way, I'd be wise to beef up the 4x6 supports below, just because glass is heavier than people think.
Chi Monger wrote:
ETCHING slider door glass?!? NOOOooooo😱
Slider doors are at minimum, tempered glass.
Once glass is tempered, which affects the exterior layers of the glass, anything used to etch, be it a vibratory tool, sand or acid, could cause it to shatter—either while etching, or some time after it’s mounted when wind, or a bird, hits it.
But at least it’d shatter in small pieces…🤷♀️
Chi Monger wrote:
We collected a number of slider door glass pieces, from folks replacing them—most were dual-pane sliders with broken seals.
I removed the rubber seals, making separate panes.
We had to build-out a roof extension across the back of our place, to protect the old walls. Could only go out 10’, to avoid co earring the septic tank too much.
Bonus: that is a microclimate helping passively reduce heating & cooling costs in the house.
(Now I want one across the front of the house!!)
That back area faces is south—but, it failed to give solar gain the right way, when the wall & its fenestrations were exposed.
We made a short wall facing the yard, with enuf space + buffer space.
For our needs (durability), I used metal roof panels as the exterior covering.
Eventually, the lower wall framing can get insulated.
We scavenged the 4x4 posts on foundation blocks.
Those get beefed-up by cladding them with 2x6 PT planks (which help hold the glass in)…our posts for that part, have 7’ wide openings. The 3rd section is a bit wider, the way things worked out.
There’s a 2x6 PT sill btwn the posts, supported by 2x4 studs…just like regular walls, just short.
There are 2x4 angles to roof from posts, to prevent racking.
I used off-the-rack metal flashing to cover the sills, & caulked the edges to prevent water getting to the wood.
The slider glass will get mounted horizontally in the openings, sitting on the sill flashing, buffered w/a silicone seal strip; one pane will sit to the outside edge of the posts, in each of 2 large openings….
I think there’s enuf glass, a 2nd pane can mount towards the inside of the posts, to form a wide airspace btwn the 2 panes—a 3”+ airspace btwn single pane glass, insulates much better than average dual-pane windows—zero condensate btwn the glass, or on the interior side—ever. (We’ve done that on 4 big windows—pairs of recycled single-pane slider windows)
Best luck: satisfaction
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Kevin Olson wrote:
Chi Monger wrote:
ETCHING slider door glass?!? NOOOooooo😱
Slider doors are at minimum, tempered glass. ……🤷♀️
Hmmm. Thinking about it, tempered is pretty touchy (hence my fretting over clamshelling thermal units), but I am certain that the glass in the doors which I etched for the church would have been tempered glass , by code. They are still intact, a good 20 years later. Maybe someone has been looking out for them...
On her YouTube channel, Kristen Dirksen has profiled several houses (at least two, but maybe more) over the past few years, built inside greenhouses, either entirely enclosed (one within a dome) or partially (i.e. two of the exterior walls of the house formed part of the exterior of the glazed enclosure). …..
Greenhouses work by reducing convective losses (no matter the common usage of "greenhouse effect"); if the gap between panes is large enough, convective cells can set up between the panes, which will enhance heat transfer across the gap. There is a point beyond which increasing the gap will be counter productive, but I don't know what that is for "air".
Attempting to maximize the resistance to heat transfer across the gap between panes bit Andersen a while ago. They tried using argon gas to fill thermal pane units, because argon has better thermal performance than dry nitrogen or other common gasses one might use (Ken Kern just used air). It was a good idea but their seals weren't up to the task (at least, the early ones weren't) and the argon would try to equalize the partial pressures between inside the thermal unit (high partial pressure, basically pure argon) and the surrounding atmosphere (low partial pressure, very little argon). Argon being noble and monatomic, it's tricky to contain (not helium tricky, but tricky, nonetheless), and the argon managed to eventually mostly escape by diffusing through the seals. This pulled a partial vacuum between the panes, and the surrounding atmospheric pressure would squeeze the panes toward each other. Sometimes one or the other pane cracked, equalizing the pressure, sometime the panes just "kissed" in the middle, resulting in condensation circles. I spent several cold days (preferably below -10F and clear) doing field fixes - drill through the seal to allow in ambient air, then set a sealing blind rivet in silicone to cork up the hole. Doing the job on a cold day helped to ensure minimal moisture would get into the thermal pane when the air was sucked in.
Kelly Craig wrote:Chuckle. The U.S. Navy uses glass etch on equipment that incorporates tempered glass. I worked on a lot of it and used the glass that would have been tossed, had I not rescued it. The rule was, no deeper than 50/1,000 of an inch.
One day, we had to do a clean up and had about fifteen of the glass tops for Mark 19 Plotters. Rather than just toss them in the dumpster, we were told to break them up, to save room. As noted, they were all etched. Many of them took several hard hits from ballpein hammers, because they all but refused to break.
At fifty one thousands of an inch, you can drag your finger nail across the glass and feel the line break, but it's not deep enough to trigger the stress factor needed to cause the glass to turn into rubble.
I've done many a tempered glass auto window and slider. None of them disintegrated. Even when, as was done to shock newbies, we slammed them with a hammer. So too it went with rock hits on vehicle windows.
The bucking horse I posted was a rear pickup window. Here are a couple of the tables I did, which were tempered glass, for the obvious safety reasons.
Side note, I was also around tempered glass that shattered into a pile of rubble just in the course of moving it.
Chi Monger wrote:
I had seen the greenhoused houses! Thot it was a very good idea. Tho, wouldn't any climate that can reach 90+*F., cook the household…requiring more cooling?? (Unless they also use geothermal…to keep costs down)
Chi Monger wrote:
Did not know that about argon—thanks—Good to know! Anderson still sells argon in their windows….when their windows are new, the resistance to heat transfer is pretty epic—a 200w heat lamp on one side of their window, did not heat the interior side of the one shown—compared with the single-pane slider window the same lamp could blister the flesh of one’s fingers.
& that is more reason to go low-tech! (Aside from their extremely high prices)
Chi Monger wrote:
Idk about diminishing returns on wider airspace’s btwn panes….it seems it must not be too much loss of efficiency, if a house can be put into a greenhouse enclosure & work enuf to warrant the cost?? I know that good seals when windows are closed, help prevent condensate btwn ours; but the one with a window AC in it, still doesn’t get much condensate.
(Twin wall has some great non-standard uses!)
If diminished efficacy happened btwn panes at a certain dimension, wouldn’t that cause condensation on one of the panes—likely the outer one?
Chi Monger wrote:
Did you mean, you took apart the windows in order to get at their seals?? BRRRR! That’s an epic job! Good on you!! Most folks just trash ‘em, & buy new ones.
Chi Monger wrote:
I wonder, how might windows fare, if instead of air btwn glass panes, that space was filled with polycarbonate? (Because temps go thru plastic slower than glass). I wonder if the plastic could be close equivalent to air/gas filled, especially if there’s the film included btwn the glass & plastic? It’d make a mess of recycling the windows, but, they’d be more resistant to breaking, & moisture couldn't get btwn to fog/grow mold…?
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