Changing Air Direction; Normal Sounds - Crosley CAH8WRR0 Use & Care Manual

Table of Contents

Advertisement

Available languages

Available languages

Thermostat
Turn the THERMOSTAT control to a mid-setting.
Adjust the air
conditioner's
performance by turning the Thermostat control
clockwise for maximum cooling. For less cooling, turn the
THERMOSTAT control counterclockwise.
Experiment to find the
setting that suits you best.
Style 2--Heat/Cool
Air Conditioner
Settings
(on some
models)
Fan Control
Set the Fan control to the desired setting. When the air
conditioner is operating at Low Cool, High Cool, Turbo Cool, Low
Heat or Turbo Heat, the fan circulates air continuously.
Low Heat--for
reduced heating
Turbo Heat--for
maximum heating
Turbo Cool--for
maximum cooling
High Cool--for
normal cooling
Low Cool--for
sleeping comfort
Fan Only--to
move air continuously
without cooling or
heating
NOTE: Fan runs on Turbo speed only.
Power Saver--the
fan runs only when cooling is needed. The
fan stops circulating air when the room temperature
matches
the Thermostat control setting.
Since the fan does not circulate the room air continuously,
less energy is used but the room air is not circulated as often.
Use Power Saver when you are asleep or away from home.
NOTE: Fan runs on Low speed only.
Thermostat
Turn the THERMOSTAT control to a mid-setting.
Adjust the air
conditioner's
performance by turning the Thermostat
control
clockwise for maximum cooling. For less cooling, turn the
THERMOSTAT control counterclockwise.
Experiment to find the
setting that suits you best.
For heating, turn the THERMOSTAT control counterclockwise.
The electric strip heater is activated when the Fan control is set to
a heat setting.
NOTE: Your air conditioner is not designed to be used as a
primary heat source. It is intended for supplemental
heating only.
Use the tabs to direct the air right or left (on some models).
Rotate the whole cartridge to direct air up, down or straight
ahead.
A
A. Tabs
When your air conditioner
is operating normally, you may hear
sounds such as:
Droplets of water hitting the condenser, causing a pinging or
clicking sound. The water droplets help cool the condenser.
Air movement from the fan.
Clicks from the thermostat cycle.
Vibrations or noise due to poor wall or window construction.
A high-pitched
hum or pulsating noise caused by the modern
high-efficiency
compressor cycling on and off.
11

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents