Fujitsu C2.5kw H3.2kw Reverse Cycle Split System Spec Average ratng: 3,6/5 3447 votes

I bought them from another seller on ebay with 15% off last year, then ended up going to good guys to get it installed.It seems that the way it works is that each Good Guys store has a panel of installers and they contract them via a airtasker service. The ones that installed our unit were very professional, very accommodating and cleaned up after themselves after getting the job done. They were very good.

  1. Fujitsu C2.5kw H3.2kw Reverse Cycle Split System Spec Test
  2. Fujitsu C2.5kw H3.2kw Reverse Cycle Split System Spec Manual

Fujitsu C2.5kw H3.2kw Reverse Cycle Split System Spec Test

Fujitsu 3.5kW Reverse Cycle Split System Air Conditioner. Comfort is only a button press away. Control the fan speed, air direction, heating or cooling cycles and more on the Fujitsu remote control. Create the ideal climate with programmable timers that ready room temperature before you get home. Take control of your climate with the 3.5kW Reverse Cycle Inverter Split System Air Conditioner from Fujitsu. Both quiet and cost effective, this unit is able to handle extreme temperatures and create ideal conditions for your small-medium sized room.

Fujitsu C2.5kw H3.2kw Reverse Cycle Split System Spec Manual

Fujitsu c2.5kw h3.2kw reverse cycle split system spec diagram

I would definitely use them again (not via good guys of course)I thought the price good guys charged was reasonable (considering they were willing to install customer supplied units). From memory it was $699And remember, you can use any good guys gift cards to pay for the install!. This is overkill for a bedroom, even a master-size bedroom.Because 2.5kW (cooling) is the smallest capacity split system most manufacturers make, I ended up putting one in my average-sized bedroom (3x3m) after getting fed up with a portable A/C unit that was far too loud and convoluted to use (with the exhaust hose and drip-tray). In summer I can barely run the new split system for more than 30 minutes even when the temperature differential is about 4-5C compared with outside air, before the room starts to feel freezing.

I have to set it on the lowest fan speed possible, to make it tolerable. You can feel the cool air outside in the hallway and in the adjacent bathroom.Your family/kitchen area would require something around 7kW at least, assuming it's all tiled, with not too many sunlight-facing windows. For instance, in my living/dining/kitchen area, which measures around 7x5m, I have an 8.5kW split system, which manages to cool that area plus the adjacent laundry and master bedroom quite well with the doors open. I only ever have to run it at medium fan speed, as anything more than that is excessive. A decent guy would install it on its own circuit, even though one of this unit only draw about 1000w, which is well below some of your appliance sharing the same circuit (washer, dishwasher and kettle) but it might trip if you decide to run both units together with a microwave and washer together. Guy A just be lazy, if you only have 1 unit installed then probably it will be safe but for 2 units its best to use separate circuit for them. Last time I had a guy installed, he put each unit in its own circuit, which was a bit overkill for these small 2.5kw units.

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