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For example, the standard home air conditioning solution is the mini-split, or ductless air conditioner, one to a room. This kind of air conditioner has an outdoor compressor and an indoor air-handling unit, with a thin tube for refrigerant connecting the two. In most of Asia from Beijing to Singapore and everywhere in between, this kind of air conditioner is the kind you encounter. There's always a remote control so you can adjust it from the comfort of your bed or your TV couch.

This appears to be the preferred way to do climate control, even in the most expensive of houses. Each room gets an air-handling unit. Multiple air-handlers can be attached to a single compressor, and the holes through the walls are quite small, so the system is quite flexible.

It is the height of extravagance to leave the thing on when you're not in the room. Even very rich people shut off the air-conditioning when they leave the room, and turn it back on when they come back, so they are only cooling the rooms they are in. The air conditioners are quite powerful and lower the temperature very quickly, even in places like Thailand or Singapore. This also means that the hallways between rooms can sometimes be quite warm.

As for water heating, the vast majority of water heaters in Asia are point-of-use. The modern ones come on automatically when you turn on the hot water, and there's a lag which is shorter than that one expects from a central water heater here in the States.

I've often thought about implementing this water heating solution here in the States, possibly combined with a central water heater somewhere to bring the water temperature from cold to warm before it reaches the point-of-use heaters, but not so hot as to lose significant heat along the way. digitalemur says that this idea would work best with a low-cost central heating system, like a solar water heater.

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Date: 2010-05-24 04:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mamamoira.livejournal.com
You can actually get tankless water heaters that are very localized; some friends of mine are getting their kitchen remodeled (courtesy of busted pipes upstairs in the winter), and are putting in a tankless unit behind the sink, but I believe the idea is to run it to the dishwasher as well.

So...how big is the inside air handler? Where does it sit? Equiv of a box fan, or mini fridge, or what?

A lot of houses at least in my part of the country built post-1970s assume central A/C ducted everywhere, and so the layout tends to be very open, not allowing for easy closing off of parts of the house. When you have one room that tends towards the warm (like, say the room housing all of the computers), you start thinking about window units. But those also are ugly and not always doable if the window isn't convenient.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-05-24 10:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] r-ness.livejournal.com
Three feet wide, more or less, and about a foot or so high. It's mounted on a wall near the ceiling, because the air vents down and out. There's almost always a "swing" setting to get the vents to move up and down.

This video, How to Install a Mini-Split Air Conditioner from This Old House, might give some idea of scale.

The Department of Energy has this page on ductless, mini-split air conditioners: http://www.energysavers.gov/your_home/space_heating_cooling/index.cfm/mytopic=12430

This Google products result has a photo of the air handling unit and the condenser unit, but no real indication of scale.

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