Originally Posted by
mike1
Oh good I was wondering what the socket sizes were also is the thing that holds the compressor bolts in is that cast aluminum? I counted 36 acs in one trailer and either 3 or 4 rows of 5 high stacks of 15 each. Getting the rads off isn't to bad the hard part is as you said the fan lol. The compressor is easy enough if I had the right socket lol witch I didn't that's at home I was at work. I'm just going to have to transport 20 or 30 at a time can only fit 20 in the shed and probably 10 outside the shed being in a trailer park they don't like stuff siting outside or I would have them all there haha.
It was a little quieter at work today so i started breaking down some of the AC & dehumidifiers for something to pass the time. Each compressor had a nut & bolt arrangement holding it to the base of the
air conditioner. Most seemed to be metric. Somewhere in the 12-14 mm range. They aren't hard to do as long as you have a 12-16 " extension.
I've decided that the first thing i like to do with an AC is flip it upside down and grind off any small screws that are poking through the bottom. Then i take a 1/8" punch and drive them through. It makes it much easier later on when you open the air conditioner up. The fan assembly is already flippy flopping around. The whole works almost comes apart in your hands. No fussing with those small phillips head screws buried way down deep inside.
It seems like there's a lot of phillips head sheet metal screws holding an air conditioner together. I use a smaller battery powered impact driver for that job. You can buzz right through them all on no time with the right tool. It would be slow going with a screwdriver.
There's no aluminum to speak of in the
air conditioners i've done so far. The base is steel. The outer shell is made of sheet metal.
The dehumidifiers i did today were almost entirely plastic. The only metal was in the compressor and in the rads.
You might not want to use a torch of any kind on an air conditioner compressor bolt. The compressor sits on rubber shock absorbers. Also ... there's a ton of plastic and styrofoam in that area that would catch fire and make toxic smoke with any amount of heat in the area.
All around ... the ac's and dehumidifiers aren't all that bad to do once you develop a method for the teardown. There doesn't seem to be a whole lot of value in there. The main reason i dismantle them is just to have them all ready for when the
Freon removal technician comes in. He can bang out 50 or 60 units per hour if i have the job set up right for his arrival. It keeps him happy and saves us a ton of money on his labor costs.
Bookmarks