MiniSplit Parts

Replacement Ductless Mini Split Parts & Components, We can help you find the right part for your SystemYou should be able to find what you are looking for on our Parts category above. We can help you find the parts you need, no matter the brand you have. We specialize in Parts for Daikin, Carrier Midea, Air-Con, Chigo, YMGI, Cooper & Hunter, OLMO. We can also get parts for brands like Senville, Pioneer, Samsung, Gree, Klimaire, Sanyo, LG, Quietside, Comfort Aire,York, Hitachi, Mirage, LG, Mitsubishi, Carrier, Trane, Toshiba, Lennox, Lowes, Home Depot as most of these major brands are produced by the same factories that make our brands. 

When ordering mini split parts online, its important for us to get pictures of the parts you need. This will help us cross reference the parts with our manufacturers to find a match. We offer many parts such as PCB (Printed Curcuit Board), Indoor and Outdoor Fan Motors, Fan Blades, Fan Wheels, Tempurature Sensors, Compressors, Remote Controls, Condensate Pumps, Filters and more. 

 
We offer Replacement Ductless Mini Split Parts & Components. Parts for brands like Daikin, Carrier, Midea, YMGI, Cooper & Hunter, AirCon, Chigo and more. Since the manufacturers of our brands also make hundreds of other brands, we can also get parts for Gree, Samsung, LG, Trane, Lennox, Carrier, Gree, Panasonic, Toshiba, Friedrich, Goodman, Cooper Hunter, YMGI, Klimaire, Senville, Blueridge, Pioneer, Sanyo, Quietside, Mr Cool and hundreds more.
     
Air conditioners employ the same operating principles and basic components as your home refrigerator. Refrigerators use energy (usually electricity) to transfer heat from the cool interior of the refrigerator to the relatively warm surroundings of your home; likewise, an air conditioner uses energy to transfer heat from the interior of your home to the relatively warm outside environment.
 
An air conditioner cools your home with a cold indoor coil called the evaporator. The condenser, a hot outdoor coil, releases the collected heat outside. The evaporator and condenser coils are serpentine tubing surrounded by aluminum fins. This tubing is usually made of copper.
 
A heat pump, called the compressor, moves a heat transfer fluid (or refrigerant) between the evaporator and the condenser. The heat pump forces the refrigerant through the circuit of tubing and fins in the coils.
 
The liquid refrigerant evaporates in the indoor evaporator coil, pulling heat out of indoor air and thereby cooling your home. The hot refrigerant gas is pumped outdoors into the condenser where it reverts back to a liquid, giving up its heat to the outside air flowing over the condenser's metal tubing and fins.
 
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, nearly all Air conditioners used chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) as their refrigerant, but because these chemicals are damaging to Earth's ozone layer, CFC production stopped in the United States in 1995. Nearly all Air conditionersystems now employ halogenated chlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) as a refrigerant, but these are also being gradually phased out, with most production and importing stopped by 2020 and all production and importing stopped by 2030.
 
Production and importing of today's main refrigerant for home air conditioners, HCFC-22 (also called R-22), will begin to be phased out in 2010 and will stop entirely by 2020. However, HCFC-22 is expected to be available for many years as it is recovered from old systems that are taken out of service. As these refrigerants are phased out, ozone-safe hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) are expected to dominate the market, as well as alternative refrigerants such as ammonia.

Ductless heat pumps make good retrofit add-ons to homes with non-ducted heating systems, such as hydronic (hot water), radiant panels, and space heaters. They can also be a great choice for additions, where installing ductwork is not possible.
 
Like standard air conditioner heat pumps, minisplits have two main components: an outdoor compressor/condenser, and an indoor air-handling unit. A conduit, which houses the power cable, refrigerant tubing, suction tubing, and a condensate drain, links the outdoor and indoor units.
 
The main advantages of a ductless unit are their small size and flexibility for zoning or heating and cooling individual rooms. Many models can have as many as four indoor air handling units (for four zones or rooms) connected to one outdoor unit. The number depends on how much heating or cooling is required for the building or each zone (which in turn is affected by how well the building is insulated). Since each of the zones will have its own thermostat, you only need to condition that place when someone is there. This will save energy and money.
 
Ductless systems are also often easier to install than other types of residential air conditioning systems. For example, the hook-up between the outdoor and indoor units generally requires only a three-inch hole through a wall for the conduit. Also, most manufacturers of this type of system can provide a variety of lengths of connecting conduits. If necessary, you can locate the outdoor unit as far away as 50 feet from the indoor evaporator. This makes it possible to cool rooms on the front side of a building house with the compressor in a more advantageous or inconspicuous place on the outside of the building.
 
Since ductless systems have no ducts, they avoid the energy losses associated with ductwork of central forced air systems. Duct losses can account for more than 30% of energy consumption, especially if the ducts are in an unconditioned space such as the attaic or crawl space.
 
In comparison to other air conditioning systems, Mini Split AC's offer more flexibility in interior design options. The indoor air handlers can be suspended from a ceiling, mounted flush into a drop ceiling, or hung on a wall. Floor-standing models are also available. Most indoor units have profiles of about seven inches deep and usually come with sleek, high tech-looking jackets. Many also offer a remote control to make it easier to turn the system on and off when it's positioned high on a wall or suspended from a ceiling.
 
Mini Split systems can also help to keep your home safer since there is only a small hole in the wall. Through-the-wall and window mounted room air conditioners can provide an easy entrance for intruders.

A new type of heat pump for residential systems is the absorption heat pump, also called a gas-fired heat pump. Absorption heat pumps use heat as their energy source, and can be driven with a wide variety of heat sources.

Ductless Split Air conditioners Heat Pump products offer wide versatility in solving your cooling and heating requirements. The Indoor unit (evaporator) is mounted inside the room, enclosed in a handsome space saving cabinet. It is connected to the outdoor unit (condenser) via refrigerant lines & inter-unit wiring through a 3 1/2" opening in the wall. Since no ductwork is required, installation is simple. fast & efficient. There is no need to use up window space or cut large openings in existing walls, which could undermine the integrity of your structure, and even pose security risks. Since the Rotary compressor is located in the outdoor unit, compressor operating noise is virtually eliminated from the indoor. The indoor unit has been uniquely designed to provide Whisper Quiet operation while delivering comfort throughout the room(s). In addition, rotary compressors provide efficient, powerful cooling at the lowest noise levels in the industry.


For climates with moderate heating and cooling needs, air conditioners & heat pumps offer an energy efficient alternative to furnaces and air conditioners. Like your refrigerator, heat pumps use electricity to move heat from a cool space into a warm, making the cool space cooler and the warm space warmer. During the heating season, heat pumps move heat from the cool outdoors into your warm house; during the cooling season, heat pumps move heat from your cool house into the warm outdoors. Because they move heat rather than generate heat, heat pumps can provide up to 4 times the amount of energy they consume.
 
The most common type of air conditioner heat pump is the air source heat pump, which transfers heat between your house and the outside air. If you heat with electricity, a heat pump can trim the amount of electricity you use for heating by as much as 30% - 40%. High-efficiency heat pumps also dehumidify better than standard central air conditioners, resulting in less energy usage and more cooling comfort in summer months. However, the efficiency of most air conditioners heat pumps as a heat source drops dramatically at low temperatures, generally making them unsuitable for cold climates, although there are systems that can overcome that problem.
 
For homes without ducts, air conditioners heat pumps are also available in a ductless version called a mini split. In addition, a special type of air source heat pump called a "reverse cycle" generates hot and cold water rather than air, allowing it to be used with radiant floor heating systems in heating mode.
 
Higher efficiencies are achieved with geothermal (ground-source or water-source) heat pumps, which transfer heat between your house and the ground or a nearby water source. Although they cost more to install, geothermal heat pumps have low operating costs because they take advantage of relatively constant ground or water temperatures. However, the installation depends on the size of your lot, the subsoil and landscape. Ground-source or water-source heat pumps can be used in more extreme climatic conditions than air-source heat pumps, and customer satisfaction with the systems is very high.

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