A small base for an Aircon Unit
A small base for an Aircon Unit
Author
Discussion

JohnnyUK

Original Poster:

1,053 posts

102 months

Yesterday (20:39)
quotequote all
Hi

We're having a/c fitted on Monday and MrsJohnnyUK insists the unit is put on the ground, as opposed to the external wall.

I've cleared away the existing pea shingle and on the advice of the fitters, put down a couple of bags of Postcrete.

There's still some way to go to make it level with the paving slabs.....ignore the black irrigation tube.

Would you finish with Concrete Mix or Mortar. ChatGPT suggests the latter.

Thanks!






Ste-EVo

376 posts

175 months

Yesterday (20:55)
quotequote all
I'd have thought a bed of concrete, and thats what I would do if it was mine, but im by no means an expert.


GasEngineer

2,281 posts

86 months

Why not use a bit more Postcrete?


VTC

2,349 posts

208 months

Postcrete is meant for underground/inground,
Wickes etc probably sell premix aggregate
add some cement mix etc.

p1stonhead

29,276 posts

191 months

Mine just sits on shingle on rubber feet like this;


caziques

2,816 posts

192 months


Don't forget about the condensate that comes from the outdoor unit when in heating mode.

Danns

437 posts

83 months

Although the manuals for the less consumer grade and more commercial models do state 100mm concrete - the feet above + shingle appears pretty standard. Pretty sure the last Electriq one I looked at made no mention - then again it left out a lot of the required commissioning checks for fgas!!

Risk really is ground shifting and unit not sitting level so the condensate mentioned above won’t drain… or ground shifting and force being put onto the copper lines made off into the unit and having the flares leak.

The height can be adjusted /levelled easy enough using the rubber feet too.

End of the day, if you are having a pro install, will be down to them signing off the installer checklist on the installation for warranty etc.

(For mine I did 100mm slab twice the size of the unit with 30mm slabs / stuck to the top with outdoor adhesive as part of the patio.. hindsight, should / easily could have just stuck with the 100mm type 1 + 40mm mortar bed under the slabs)

Panamax

8,525 posts

58 months

It just needs to be standing on something stable, typically a couple of small slabs just sitting there for the purpose. Whether those slabs are standing on concrete or shingle makes no difference. If the unit comes with those rubber feet I guess you rely on those alone. They look to me more like sound/vibration deadening for when the units are standing on a roof but could obviously be used on the ground as well..