Bits N Pieces 0 Report post Posted June 11, 2010 Salesman must be psycho you to buy a non-inverter AC then. No. I bought the invertor during the roadshow at Suntec last week. The theme is energy saving so only selling invertor. The salesman just pointed out what is the differences. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Eric19 0 Report post Posted June 11, 2010 Dear All Thanks for the feedback. One last question, is it very messy to replace the blower and piping after you have move-in ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
therat 18 Report post Posted June 11, 2010 imagine, knocking a hole on the wall to run the pipe, trucking from 1 room to another room. If you had build-in feature like wardrobe, how? Their trucking is thicker than normal wiring trucking. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bepgof 20 Report post Posted June 11, 2010 No. I bought the invertor during the roadshow at Suntec last week. The theme is energy saving so only selling invertor. The salesman just pointed out what is the differences. Coolant fluid(gas) is compressed and force to flow by means of pistol-action which's mechanically linked to motor's rotary movement. Non-inverter version's compressor motor is either "on" or "off", rotating at a constant speed, is quite harmful to the pistols and the current is also always in "surge" waveform. This compressor is exactly the same as the car's Ac compressor, buy pistol-action is coupled to engineer's rotation. Always do not switch on or off the car's ac when rpm is high, harmful to pistol. Inverter's motor is AC motor, with frequency-modulated power input, ie, high frequency(high load) higher speed, low frequncy(low load) lower speed. There is no frequent on/off actions like on-inverter type does, so technically speaking prolong life of compressor as well as less power consumption,ie no sudden surges. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bepgof 20 Report post Posted June 11, 2010 (edited) Dear All Thanks for the feedback. One last question, is it very messy to replace the blower and piping after you have move-in ? You mean FCU relocation after move-in? If answer is yes, then answer to your question is also a yes. Edited June 11, 2010 by bepgof Share this post Link to post Share on other sites