John
>What might cause a room air conditioner to put off a fishy odor?
Dead something in the condensate tray. Take it outside, remove the
covers, gently spray both coils and the tray with a hose. Use a
chopstick to poke loose any caked up crud. You might need coil
cleaner after that, and another rinse, but you might get away with
using dish washing liquid mixed with warm water sprayed from a garden
sprayer.
Usual warnings - stay clear of the electric components, let it dry
before plugging back in, don't stick your finger in a socket, etc.
Either that, or the condensate tray is not draining properly. That is, it
might be DRAINING, but only after it reaches a certain level. So what's
left sitting there is stagnating. -Dave
Then the fishy smell goes away. I only need to do this once or twice a year.
<jc...@lycos.com> wrote in message
Uh, do you live in New Orleans by any chance?
Don
Every window A/C I've seen has done this; it's not just newer ones. In
fact, the newer (3-4 year old) units I have don't accmulate much water
on their own. I can add a quart, but it doesn't last more than a few
hours (then again, we're seeing 100F - 102F highs at the moment).
> This standing water can get things growing
>in it.
I can vouch for that, having found thick layers of mold growing in the
old A/Cs I replaced...
> I just pour a little bleach in the side of the air conditioner
>outside and this kills whatever is growing in the water.
Bleach is corrosive to aluminum. I've been advised to use hudrogen peroxide,
which seems to work without risking damage to the coils.
>Then the fishy smell goes away. I only need to do this once or twice a year.
I've never noticed a fishy smell, just bits of black mold getting thrown
out of the vents. (The insides of both coils of one window unit got clogged
with it--badly.)
Gary
--
Gary Heston ghe...@hiwaay.net What do you call two SUVs colliding?
Poetic justice.
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