I have searched videos everywhere online. I have 2 FH series 12000 BTU mini splits, so this has been the best video I have seen. Companies out there charge a fortune per unit to clean them and they are not as thorough as these. They spray, rinse and drain it into a bucket without taking the unit apart. Thanks again for an incredible video.
I took my time with our unit. Took a couple hours because it also ended up leaking all over the floor and other items. This was a great tutorial for what I needed to get the job done. Last time this leaked inside the house I used a bucket wet vacuum on the outside condensate line. For whatever reason ours gets clogged often. Seems like the whole unit should have been designed somehow so that this level of cleaning wasn't necessary. At any rate, special thanks to you guys for the great video. Very much appreciated.
Thank you guys soooo so much. Our apartment has this unit... wasn't used all winter and today noticed a massive amounts of white mold in this unit. Wouldn't have been able to take it apart and give it the cleaning it needed without this video. ** If anyone is hearing a loud knocking noise with the unit turned on after maintenance** It is likely that the blower piece hasnt been put on the shaft far enough. I had to completely pull the unit apart again. Just loosen the screw slightly and push the unit from the left into the shaft a little more.
I’ve been an HVAC technician for 25 years and to this day mini splits still scare the s**t out of me because I’m always convinced I’m going to break something. This is one of the absolute best videos I’ve ever seen on how to service these units. Well done sir!
Thank you so much for this video. Tilting the coil out of the way a few inches and removing the wheel made it possible to clean this MSZ-GE thoroughly like new. I could not find a tech who wanted to spend the time doing this like you guys, DIY'd it, and got the job done thanks to your video.
A very lucid and well shot, well explained video. Calm, nice speaking voices and no excess verbage. One of the best I have seen while combing through youtube for how to dismantle, remove the blower wheel and clean the coils with the evap cleaner foam. Exactly what I was looking for. Thank you!
Finally, a good simple video! Mine started leaking the other day. Maintenance, hasn;'t been running calls because of the virus. After this video, I had it stripped down, cleaned out and back together in under 20 minutes. Thanks a ton!
Great video for the FH Series mini-splits. I thought I would add a couple of details about the removal of the plastic housing for clarity. There are 5 screws in total, two are under an easily removed angular cap on the lower lip, two more on the right and one on the left, all shown in the video. The large cover pops right out when open and is easy to put back on, the right hand plastic housing is pretty easy too. The large main housing needs to be pulled out from the bottom a bit, especially on the left side, and then a pretty forceful pull from the top. There are four plastic clips that you pull straight out from the wall. I found starting from the right, then middle and finally left worked best (I have three units, so I got better at this). Putting it back is easy...line it up and give the top front in line with the clips a slight punch with your palm, working your way down. Finally, there is a strip of plastic on the bottom edge that must be removed. I had trouble with this, but it turns out there is only one clip in the middle that you need to pry with a flat headed screw driver to get it to release. That was not obvious in the video, although they do show it being removed.
GREAT VIDEO ! START HERE IF YOU ARE TRYING TO CLEAN YOUR OWN UNIT. thanks guys for this video, Garret is one of the few Mitsu service guys who really knows what he's doing. Diamond indeed !
I have had a 6k btu MSZ-FH06NA working in our tiny house for a year now and we started noticing that we could hear the fan and the air would blow inconsistently. I followed the tutorial from this video and now it’s working like new again, quiet and a noticeable reduction in time to cool the tiny house. In spite of cleaning the filters every 1-2 months, the blower fan was caked with build up. We have a dog and live in a rural setting so it seems like I’ll need to do this on an annual PM schedule. Thank you!
great video, clear and easy to follow. Note that spraying the foam on the coils can dislodge lots of water. Also, using a toothbrush to really clean into the plastic groves on each surface helped me. There are a lot of places were mold can accumulate. I made sure to open extra windows and doors to improve the ventilation for the foam cleaner. I'd recommend gloves as well.
Excellent video, and super generous of the HVAC guy to share his knowledge. Despite emitting a musty odor, my unit didn't initially seem that dirty. No streaks of dust on the blower wheel, and none of that black mildew anywhere inside. However, when cleaning the blower wheel, I found that a thorough outdoor rinsing with a garden hose (even at full blast) insufficient for removing the thin film of unknown substance collected on the undersides of the blower wheel fins. In the end, I had to manually scrub every fin individually with cotton q-tips - a very laborious process! Based on my experience, I would recommend anyone trying this themselves to spend the extra time needed to be a bit more meticulous with the blower wheel cleaning step.
I used this excellent video to clean my Mitsubishi MSZ-FE09. Garret Beneker knows what to say, and what not to say--no wasted time, and well produced. Even though my unit has additional sensors and bracketry, I was able to follow along and figure it out. The first one took a couple hours--I watched the video several times and followed it step-by-step, the next time I do it it'll be much faster!
This video is exactly what i needed! Thank you for being clear with every step. Ours was so nasty! I jad no idea. Funny story, i got everything reassembled and then when turned on, it made a noise... I hadn't tightened the screw holding on the blower wheel. I had to completely disassemble again. At least ot went quicker the second time. Thanks again for a clear video.
One of the air handlers in my house had started rattling and the airflow seemed less than it had been. I have the exact model as the one in your video, and the video enabled me to take everything apart, clean and reassemble. It only cost me an $8 can of ac coil cleaner. It is working great now! Thanks for the informative easy to follow video!
I have cleaned my unit each year, but never took the blower fan out. It was So much easier and did a much, much better job now that you showed me how to do the job right. Thank you!
Fantastic video from a pro to clean it the right way. I couldn't run this AC/Heat pump in my studio over the garage! It started to really bother my eyes and sinuses. I had no idea these units need regular cleaning for the mold (I've never cleaned the air handler in the attic in my whole house AC, and still no problems). Even still, I'm very happy with this unit which is the only heat and ac source for this space.
Purchased: August 2023 - still works GREAT!I ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxxsUnXhGsSJLim_XnMHyQK0u3XVaW-CGn live in a studio and during the summer it gets scorching hot - really old building with no ac units. I can’t express how EASY it was to install. This unit has been a life savior during the summer and some days during other seasons where it can still be a bit warm at night. In this small place is my friend, a husky, poodle mix and myself. We need AC - lolI don’t use the dehumidifier option - I’m not sure if it will leak in my house, since I did not install the small draining hose that came with it. May look into it late but I don’t worry about much humidity in the apartment. I don’t understand why the negative reviews since all things mentioned, I personally did not find issues with. Definitely worth it!
thanks so much guys.....tore mine down and cleaned today for the 1st time, had it almost a year.........oh my gawd!!! Surprised we are all not trying to eat each others brains! Back up and running, made a huge difference. I thought it was dying, turns out, was just filthy thank again!!!
Awesome video! Short, down to business, informative and easy cleaning guide. Other videos got you buying cleaning kits and termite tenting then spraying down your ac unit lol. What a headache! You gave me hope for cleaning my 4 units in one weekend afternoon...THANK YOU!!
Just went through this exact procedure today with the help of this video. Had to pressure wash out the blower wheel, but now it looks like new! Thanks for this video!
From my experience at the Mitsubishi diamond dealer training center in Boston i was informed to never use anything but water to clean the coil because coil cleaners will strip the protective coating off the fins resulting in faster build up. I would prefer to use an actual cleaner over water. What are your thoughts?
Wow! Thank you so much for this. I have had mini splits for about 3 1/2 years. I pay to have maintenance done twice a year. A leak has recently developed in the front of one of the units and I can see mildew in the back of both units. I have never seen them do this sort of maintenance on the air handlers. All they do is clean the air filters 😳 I thought it was strange they weren't doing these types of things. Thank you so much!! I will be in touch with my HVAC company to make them aware of what they ought to be doing with their maintenance routine.
@@HomePerformance Well, didn't have much luck in convincing them they should be doing the sort of maintenance. I got details on what they consider "maintenance". All it is is a look see inspection to how things are going. If you need anything done of the nature you guys were doing in this video, they will charge you to do it.
Same EXACT situation with us. Paid $400 for them to clean the air filters on 7 units. That's just insane. I called them and asked them why they don't do this level of service. They said, "We'll have our front desk schedule service." Nope. We'll do it ourselves now with this great info and it will be done right. Is there much difference with the MSZ models?
Thank you for posting this tutorial. It helped me with cleaning my units. The only thing I would add is that the drain pan is alot easier to reinstall if the coil mount screws are still loose on the left side of the unit. Once in place then tighten the mount screws. Regardless, very useful video. Thank you.
This was the perfect video. I was able to follow along and managed to get my wall mounted mini split cleaned. I also have a second mini split in the house that is floor mounted, and I haven't been able to figure out how to get it opened up. Please do a video on this. It is also a mitsubishi.
I have the actual service manual for this, but that did not help one bit in taking the unit apart. This video however, was exactly what was needed to quickly take the whole thing apart, including the cylindrical fan. Thank you.
Millions of microscopic spores are floating in the air as he is wiping the “mildew” from the drain pan. We see HVAC techs normalize mold constantly. I can see why. That drain pan should have been cleaned outside. But thank you for this video! I learn so much from your vids. Almost every time I’m looking up something to do with IAQ or home performance, I’m brought here :)
Thanks Pete! And don’t feel too hard on these guys- they’re not trained or equipped to do many of the things we explore on this channel, and they run from hot attic to nasty crawlspace all day. One of the most terrible jobs I can imagine, frankly.
@@HomePerformance 100% agreed! These guys see the worst of the worst daily. We need to change the standards of building and stop building vented dirt crawl spaces and unconditioned attics! Not to mention, placing HVAC installs in them, duh! Ultimately though, humans need to stop neglecting their homes…
John Thank you, very informative. I currently have a problem with the flappers. They won't open at all with the machine running. could you please advise what the problem may be.
glad I found this video. I already knew how the right side came apart (cn105 access) but not the entire unit and the little wiggle tricks needed. Man did my oldest sons u it have mold. Took 3hrs to clean all the mold and that blower was caked with dust and mold. nasty!!! seems the air filters are not adequate enough. will need to clean this yearly going forwards. As was stated by someone else, my blower was rubbing somewhere really bad, had to push all the way right. now it rubs less, maybe I moved it too far right. next time I pull it apart I'll have to adjust it again. .. again thanks for the great video.
This was extremely helpful. I have 4 units. No issues during the process but I chose to rinse the cleaner off the coils with a garden pump thingamajig. They didnt think about it during install to cover the drain pipes on the outside with a grate or anything. Had about 6 carpenter bees in each drain pan. Dead at least.
Great vid. Used it today to save a great deal of $ on my cleaning. First cleaning since install 2 years ago. Now I am confident enough to do this every 6 months or so. Wife is black mold toxic. Got any advice on the rotating electric eye noise. Kind of a clicking sound.
Thank you for this video! I have the same model, so disassemble and cleaning was exactly the same. Was afraid of breaking the plastic clips, but came apart without issue. Have to wait till the summer to clean the coils like you did with the cleaner. Thx again.
Thanks so much for this great tutorial! I followed along while cleaning my FH and everything was pretty much as seen. The only thing I ran into is that I had to pop off two little caps to reveal the bottom screws. I initially didn't notice the caps until I started getting the thing taken apart because they look like part of the housing. Fortunately ours didn't have any mold, however and unbeknownst to us, there was a bunch of blown in cellulose insulation that had come through where the hoses and cables pass through the wall and it filled all the spaces around i-See sensor servo.
This was super helpful! We had our unit in an attic that didn't see much action before, so we hadn't cleaned it more than washing the filters over the last five years. We've used the room as an office and now a hobby room, so a lot more dust has kicked up and a cat roams around, so I finally gave it a good cleaning. It would have taken way longer without this help!
Thank you for the excellent video. My unit has been dripping water, with the drain pan overflowing. Do you have any tips / suggestions on cleaning / clearing the drain line from the unit? The rest of the unit seems clean.
I wish I had known about this when I had my unit installed 4 years ago. Now I'm sure I'll have quite a bit of cleaning to do and hope I can remember most of the instructions shown
Interesting idea. Be aware though that the Mitsubishi Manuals have a trouble shooting entry for yellowing of plastics. The cause is exposure to UV light...
Mildew also comes from not running these in Fan mode, after using as A/C, to give it time to dry, before turning it off. Not mentioned, many health hazard warnings, on the evap cleaner foams: googles, gloves and high ventilation turnover needed when using these.
Great video. I was just about to call to have mine serviced. The outside unit has been leaking water at the bottom and is green on the fins. It was installed on a plastic platform on an unstable surface and is not level at all...by a diamond certified company BTW. They won't make good on it, and come out and get it level. Do you have a video about cleaning the outside unit? Or can you explain to me how to do it? Also it is winter here and quite cold can I spray the cleaner on the fins on the inside unit and just close it up or do I need to rinse it off. I mainly use it for heat, not for air conditioning. Do I have to wait till the summer to spray the coils like you did with the foam cleaner. Thx again, Viki
Hi Viki- just make sure to brush away all leaves from the backside of the condenser, and spray it down to get dust off the coil. Inside, yes, the stuff is meant to be washed off, either by automatic condensation or by you.
Video was super informative. The most important information I learned was that I would never have anything that needed that much maintenance in my home. What a user unfriendly design. My air handler is 29 y/o. My filter is a Honeywell electronic air cleaner. I get no smell and I have never cleaned the evaporator coil.
It is not very easy to clean. But for once every maybe two years, it’s not too bad. It’s also exceptionally efficient, installed easily on my house which has hot water heat and therefore no ducts whatsoever. Each room has its own thermostat. Once it’s cleaned I know it’s completely clean. That said I wish it didn’t have so many plastic nooks and crannies to clean. But tbh it’s worth the advantages of the system. Mine never smelled, even though there was some buildup of gunk. I’d be scared to see what 29 years of no cleaning looks like, have you ever looked inside there?
Thanks for the quick response. For inside unit should I let sit...for how long? then spray water on it, then run it on heat? For outside the fins are green with algae, should I use same cleaner, and then rinse? I do regularly blow around, under and in it. What about the water dripping under it is that normal? I've seen other vids for other kinds of outdoor units where they take the top off and spray foam cleaner in... none for Mitsubishi. wonder if that would be a good idea or if it would void warranty. Had no idea this would be such a costly maintenance when I got rid of my wood burning stove and put it in.
Yeah, everything needs maintenance- better this way than sweeping a chimney though! Yes, dripping water is normal, that’s the condensate from the humidity being pulled out from indoors (I’m guessing). No advice for the outdoor coil, I’d ask Stephen Rardon (search youtube for his channel).
Sooo glad I ran into this video. My mini-split looks horrible. I thought the only thing I needed to clean was the filter. Also, your friend in all black looks like he ain't the one to play with. Like, on ANY given day, LOL.
great video! about to tackle my unit tomorrow... 2 questions for you: how does the drip pan just hang there? Is it made to do that (just want to be sure I don't damage it) and instead of removing the blower wheel - could I just use a soft small brush and vacuum up the debris? Not so sure I want to remove the wheel. Thanks!!
Yes, the drip pan is fitted in place and will stay attached if you get it out of the way. Trust me, take the blower wheel out. You want to wipe behind where it sits anyway, and you’ll have gone 95% of the way there already.
I did it! I was getting virtually no airflow down the entire center 80% of the unit. Nobody instructed us on routine maintenance beyond cleaning the filter every now and then so you can imagine what the fan looked like after maybe 8 years 😅 I was a little worried because it is hard to tell how much force you're applying in the video. Especially around the coil assembly I feared I might break the whole thing in the middle of summer. Some steps require a little more than a gentle nudge but I was able to get it all cleaned and reassembled with no broken pieces and it's working like the first day again. One thing I noticed is that it seems like it's starting to build a bit of corrosion around the right side of the unit near the drip pan around the copper coolant pipes. Like the coil fins are a bit discolored in a copper tone and there was the same color residue in the very right side of the drip pan. Is there anything that can be done about this or is this even something I gotta worry about? As long as it's not damaging the pipes and only discoloring the surroundings it's no issue but if the seal breaks it's probably a goner.
Thank you so much for rhe tutorial/video. Indeed one of the best video/tutorial/thos is how to do it I've seen. Been having issues with water dripping and with our Hospital maintenance crews busy elsewhere I'm glad I can do this and help them out. Will be passing this to our other crew members so they can also take care of the units in their rooms. Thanks again One last thing.... any other alternative coil cleaning that can be purchased/used by us general public? If there is, can you update us? Thank you
Interesting, Juan, and happy to help! Quick search of Amazon for ‘A/C coil cleaner’ four stars and above shows 179 results. Have fun- with that much practice, your crew will be stellar.
We were never told about the fact that this unit needs to be cleaned. The instruction booklet only mentions cleaning the filters which we do but later found the inside was filthy"
@@HomePerformance Who knew Mitshubishi does not make a TOTALLY maintenance free hvac? FYI.. My five winters and going into the fifth summer is a 45% reduction in heat bill and 35% in summer cooling cost. The real story is my home no longer has issues with mildew or mold.
Thanks!!! The SET SCREW!! I spent hours alternating between watching videos made by wingnuts who just wanted to sell their cleaning kit, and inhaling probable Legionella spores into my bronchioles while trying to figure it out myself before I finally found this video (cough . . .).
Nice video. I have the same unit. Two questions: (the unit is 8 years old). I have dirt coming out of the unit every or every other day, dirt in the form of black/grey chunks that look like compressed dust. Could I take my leaf blower and blow through the unit to get the dirt/dust out? Could that ruin the unit? Thanks, david from Toronto
Is there a drain hose on the right side of the unit that can be blown out as well? I saw the drain pan, not sure if I missed you covering the hose? My mini-split is leaking, and I'm guessing the hose for which the water drains could be clogged?
Another thank you from me! Did this almost exactly and feels so good to have a clean unit. Mine is a slightly different model Mitsubishi, so it was a bit different, but close enough to follow. I wanted to ask what you do for the secondary drip tray in the top back of the unit? I wiped mine out as best as I could, but it is not very accessible. It was not nearly as dirty as the main drip tray, so I can see why it may be omitted, but wondered if you had any tips on cleaning back there? Thanks again!!
Just cleaned 9 of these. replacing the wheel on the larger units can be a nightmare. try placing the wheel centered on the shaft (maybe add some lithium lube) and push to the right while spinning until it snaps in. Can take a lot of trial and error.
Thank so much for this video. Got some installed a month ago. Off topic, do you think 811kWh extra for one month (27.97 kWh a day) to run 12000 and a 9000 head sound like a lot average temperature was 1C the coldest it got was -9C and 11c during the day. Good insulation in my house, had home inspectorcome for rebate for heat pump and insulation and windows. Heated my house to 18c. I have the cold climate system. As I'm in ontario. I had to have the remote set at 22C to even achieve 18c on the negative days. But on the days where it was above 0 it got up to 20c or 21c. Just wondering if i have a refrigerant problem. My tech guy says well it blows out warm air so it is fine. Thank again!!!! Love you video. Learning so much. They get installed and then it feels like I'm all on my own. So got to do my own research. And your channel is my favorites for learning about split heat pumps.
Thank you for a good simple video. Would you consider posting a similar video without any music in the background? I would like to more easily hear what you are saying without music that detracts from what you are demonstrating.
I’ve done this service on my indoor head 4-5 times now, with your instructional video. But there’s something missing. What about the bank of coils in the back that faces the wall. How do you clean them effectively with the limited space due to the ceiling. Been using Viper coil cleaner but hasn’t effectively cleaned all the coils, this time around.
This is a great, clear video, thank you. I can't wait to try it on our units, that are starting to have a musty smell. Our unit drains to a container that is pumped up onto our roof, since it's on an inside wall. Is there any way to make sure the drain piping is cleaned out as well? And the pump, too? Also, is there a recommended distance from the ceiling for installing these units so there's enough air return above them?
Great questions! I’d clean the pump by hand and replace the drain hose if it looks old and crummy. And the clearances are in the installation manual, I’m sure, which you can download online. Good luck.
All is clear in the video and I’m looking forward to completing the job. My only issue is I can’t seem to take off the piece in between to the two screws that are hidden by the screw covers. It’s the step right before pulling off the drain pan. (3:08) This piece popped right off in the video. Is there flap in the middle?
At random yes I did figure it out. I’m glad this popped up on my alerts so I could help. I just pulled horizontally out until it came off. Maybe a slight upward pressure as you need your fingertips to slide it out. There’s a small tab that if in the worst case scenario breaks it seems the unit would still be secure with the screws on the side. This video gives a nice visual of the part and gave me confidence to be a little less gentle. I also did some translating online and it all came to “its held up by a tab” or something. ua-cam.com/video/VjKi6WOPuCY/v-deo.html The video is spot on. I found the set screws to be stubborn as it has never been loosened. It eventually came off. The drip pan is hard to get off and once you locate the 3 small tabs it sits on you’ll have more confidence to pull it off. I used the ladder to prop it up so it didn’t hang. The coils were tricky because they sit tight. Once you locate the tabs they sit on then it’s easier. Plus after pulling the wheel out you need to be sure the coils sit on the tab. I was worried it would fall and didn’t as long it sits on the mini tabs on the left. I’m quite the novice in regards to DIY and didn’t want to be stuck with a big bill to clean hope this helps!
The biggest PITA I find is getting the drip pan onto the unit correctly. It looks like Garret may have had trouble too as it looks like part of that video was cut???? What is the trick to get that drip pan to snap in easily?
I laughed when I saw this post b/c I had just said the same thing, "They cut out this part out from the video!" Yes, this is the hardest part and I'm sitting here struggling with it. This is my second time doing this and both times this was the pitfall. Any other suggestions out there other than messing with it a little bit? Otherwise, this video is definitely the best out there!
Do you have the FH series like the video? I did one of mine yesterday and was surprised to see rust on the right side of the coil. Also after reassembly the upper horizontal vanes don't seem to close as flush as the units I haven't taken apart yet.
yeah I do. Mine had some rust on the right side as well.. I think that's common on ductless as most of the videos I've seen have that. As for the vanes, it's not supposed to matter what position you put them back in as they should do a full sweep at startup to orient themselves
@@Cryptic-1-9-1-1 Mine do the full sweep and operate correctly, I just noticed the top vanes aren't fully closed and parallel with the front cover like the one in my son's room which hasn't been apart. I double checked and they're in right, not a big deal just being a bit particular I guess. I think the rust is normal there as well, they should have used stainless steel IMO.
Any advice on popping the back 4 clips for the main plastic cover? I am at that point, and not sure how/what direction to pull or push to get the big plastic cover off without snapping something.
so how do you clean the mildew out of the back end of this thing where the final coil folds over at the top , i see it terminates in openings at the very bottom of the unit but not into the drain pan oddly enough
I noticed the same thing in mine. I don't think there's a [reasonable] way. It looks like the only way to get back there would be to remove the coil and dismount the entire unit from the wall. I'm not in love with the design of these things tbh.
I have searched videos everywhere online. I have 2 FH series 12000 BTU mini splits, so this has been the best video I have seen. Companies out there charge a fortune per unit to clean them and they are not as thorough as these. They spray, rinse and drain it into a bucket without taking the unit apart. Thanks again for an incredible video.
Awesome praise, thanks so much!
I took my time with our unit. Took a couple hours because it also ended up leaking all over the floor and other items. This was a great tutorial for what I needed to get the job done. Last time this leaked inside the house I used a bucket wet vacuum on the outside condensate line. For whatever reason ours gets clogged often. Seems like the whole unit should have been designed somehow so that this level of cleaning wasn't necessary.
At any rate, special thanks to you guys for the great video. Very much appreciated.
Great to hear we helped you, Kirk! That’s why we do this!
Thank you guys soooo so much. Our apartment has this unit... wasn't used all winter and today noticed a massive amounts of white mold in this unit. Wouldn't have been able to take it apart and give it the cleaning it needed without this video.
** If anyone is hearing a loud knocking noise with the unit turned on after maintenance**
It is likely that the blower piece hasnt been put on the shaft far enough. I had to completely pull the unit apart again. Just loosen the screw slightly and push the unit from the left into the shaft a little more.
You are SO WELCOME. Grace and I love hearing that our vids help people like you!
By knocking noise do you mean like a helicopter?
I’ve been an HVAC technician for 25 years and to this day mini splits still scare the s**t out of me because I’m always convinced I’m going to break something. This is one of the absolute best videos I’ve ever seen on how to service these units. Well done sir!
Wow, what a great comment! Thanks Christian.
Thank you so much for this video. Tilting the coil out of the way a few inches and removing the wheel made it possible to clean this MSZ-GE thoroughly like new. I could not find a tech who wanted to spend the time doing this like you guys, DIY'd it, and got the job done thanks to your video.
Wonderful! Glad to have helped!
A very lucid and well shot, well explained video. Calm, nice speaking voices and no excess verbage. One of the best I have seen while combing through youtube for how to dismantle, remove the blower wheel and clean the coils with the evap cleaner foam. Exactly what I was looking for. Thank you!
High praise, thanks for following
Finally, a good simple video! Mine started leaking the other day. Maintenance, hasn;'t been running calls because of the virus. After this video, I had it stripped down, cleaned out and back together in under 20 minutes. Thanks a ton!
Dude. Great story. So glad you found us.
Yes, this is the clearest, most comprehensive video. All the steps are there. So grateful!
Happy it helped you Maya
Great video for the FH Series mini-splits. I thought I would add a couple of details about the removal of the plastic housing for clarity. There are 5 screws in total, two are under an easily removed angular cap on the lower lip, two more on the right and one on the left, all shown in the video. The large cover pops right out when open and is easy to put back on, the right hand plastic housing is pretty easy too. The large main housing needs to be pulled out from the bottom a bit, especially on the left side, and then a pretty forceful pull from the top. There are four plastic clips that you pull straight out from the wall. I found starting from the right, then middle and finally left worked best (I have three units, so I got better at this). Putting it back is easy...line it up and give the top front in line with the clips a slight punch with your palm, working your way down. Finally, there is a strip of plastic on the bottom edge that must be removed. I had trouble with this, but it turns out there is only one clip in the middle that you need to pry with a flat headed screw driver to get it to release. That was not obvious in the video, although they do show it being removed.
Good tips, thx
GREAT VIDEO ! START HERE IF YOU ARE TRYING TO CLEAN YOUR OWN UNIT. thanks guys for this video, Garret is one of the few Mitsu service guys who really knows what he's doing. Diamond indeed !
THANK YOU SIR
FH-series is the absolute pinnacle of split ductless heat pump design. I applaud your choice. It really is an excellent investment.
I have had a 6k btu MSZ-FH06NA working in our tiny house for a year now and we started noticing that we could hear the fan and the air would blow inconsistently.
I followed the tutorial from this video and now it’s working like new again, quiet and a noticeable reduction in time to cool the tiny house.
In spite of cleaning the filters every 1-2 months, the blower fan was caked with build up. We have a dog and live in a rural setting so it seems like I’ll need to do this on an annual PM schedule.
Thank you!
You actually explained that in more detail than anyone else thanks mate from Australia
Happy to hear- glad you found us bud
The Hvac guy doing the cleaning had a simple articulate approach of explaining & great attitude thanks Home performance 👍
great video, clear and easy to follow. Note that spraying the foam on the coils can dislodge lots of water. Also, using a toothbrush to really clean into the plastic groves on each surface helped me. There are a lot of places were mold can accumulate. I made sure to open extra windows and doors to improve the ventilation for the foam cleaner. I'd recommend gloves as well.
Great advice all the way, Dan. Thanks!
Excellent video, and super generous of the HVAC guy to share his knowledge.
Despite emitting a musty odor, my unit didn't initially seem that dirty. No streaks of dust on the blower wheel, and none of that black mildew anywhere inside. However, when cleaning the blower wheel, I found that a thorough outdoor rinsing with a garden hose (even at full blast) insufficient for removing the thin film of unknown substance collected on the undersides of the blower wheel fins. In the end, I had to manually scrub every fin individually with cotton q-tips - a very laborious process! Based on my experience, I would recommend anyone trying this themselves to spend the extra time needed to be a bit more meticulous with the blower wheel cleaning step.
Try using soap water next time instead of a q-tip!!!
Thank u
What about spraying it down with lemon scented Lysol, in addition to the soapy water?
I used kitchen degreaser diluted with water and a shoe polish brush, wheel like new
I used this excellent video to clean my Mitsubishi MSZ-FE09. Garret Beneker knows what to say, and what not to say--no wasted time, and well produced. Even though my unit has additional sensors and bracketry, I was able to follow along and figure it out. The first one took a couple hours--I watched the video several times and followed it step-by-step, the next time I do it it'll be much faster!
Hell yeah my friend!
This video is exactly what i needed! Thank you for being clear with every step.
Ours was so nasty! I jad no idea.
Funny story, i got everything reassembled and then when turned on, it made a noise... I hadn't tightened the screw holding on the blower wheel. I had to completely disassemble again. At least ot went quicker the second time.
Thanks again for a clear video.
One of the air handlers in my house had started rattling and the airflow seemed less than it had been. I have the exact model as the one in your video, and the video enabled me to take everything apart, clean and reassemble. It only cost me an $8 can of ac coil cleaner. It is working great now! Thanks for the informative easy to follow video!
HELL YEAH JUNICAT
I have cleaned my unit each year, but never took the blower fan out. It was So much easier and did a much, much better job now that you showed me how to do the job right. Thank you!
Great to hear!
Fantastic video from a pro to clean it the right way. I couldn't run this AC/Heat pump in my studio over the garage! It started to really bother my eyes and sinuses. I had no idea these units need regular cleaning for the mold (I've never cleaned the air handler in the attic in my whole house AC, and still no problems). Even still, I'm very happy with this unit which is the only heat and ac source for this space.
Purchased: August 2023 - still works GREAT!I ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxxsUnXhGsSJLim_XnMHyQK0u3XVaW-CGn live in a studio and during the summer it gets scorching hot - really old building with no ac units. I can’t express how EASY it was to install. This unit has been a life savior during the summer and some days during other seasons where it can still be a bit warm at night. In this small place is my friend, a husky, poodle mix and myself. We need AC - lolI don’t use the dehumidifier option - I’m not sure if it will leak in my house, since I did not install the small draining hose that came with it. May look into it late but I don’t worry about much humidity in the apartment. I don’t understand why the negative reviews since all things mentioned, I personally did not find issues with. Definitely worth it!
Huh? Where do you have the drain pan draining to? Water condenses on cold AC coils and the drain pain will fill with water.
thanks so much guys.....tore mine down and cleaned today for the 1st time, had it almost a year.........oh my gawd!!! Surprised we are all not trying to eat each others brains! Back up and running, made a huge difference. I thought it was dying, turns out, was just filthy
thank again!!!
Glad to hear it!
After numerous videos, yours was the one to help me get the outer cover off. Thanks for the detailed video and saving me $$$!
You’re very welcome, Todd! Glad you found us!
Just cleaned my minisplit, this video was amazing as it's the same model I have and made the job very easy! Thanks for posting!
🙌🏽
Awesome video! Short, down to business, informative and easy cleaning guide. Other videos got you buying cleaning kits and termite tenting then spraying down your ac unit lol. What a headache! You gave me hope for cleaning my 4 units in one weekend afternoon...THANK YOU!!
✊
I have watched many UA-cam videos on this subject and this by far the easiest to follow and understand!
Just started service this summer. About to do my first deep clean on a Mini Split this week. Thank you for this video!
Maybe a couple screw locations were not clear, but this is a great video for the homeowner or repairman. Thank you!
So glad it helps!
Just went through this exact procedure today with the help of this video. Had to pressure wash out the blower wheel, but now it looks like new! Thanks for this video!
So glad it helped you, John. I rewatch it every time I have to do it myself!
From my experience at the Mitsubishi diamond dealer training center in Boston i was informed to never use anything but water to clean the coil because coil cleaners will strip the protective coating off the fins resulting in faster build up. I would prefer to use an actual cleaner over water. What are your thoughts?
Great video! Easy to understand and without the usual nonsense talking or annoying music. God job and thank you!
Thank you!
Wow! Thank you so much for this. I have had mini splits for about 3 1/2 years. I pay to have maintenance done twice a year. A leak has recently developed in the front of one of the units and I can see mildew in the back of both units. I have never seen them do this sort of maintenance on the air handlers. All they do is clean the air filters 😳 I thought it was strange they weren't doing these types of things. Thank you so much!! I will be in touch with my HVAC company to make them aware of what they ought to be doing with their maintenance routine.
Glad you found us, and good luck
@@HomePerformance Well, didn't have much luck in convincing them they should be doing the sort of maintenance. I got details on what they consider "maintenance". All it is is a look see inspection to how things are going. If you need anything done of the nature you guys were doing in this video, they will charge you to do it.
Same EXACT situation with us. Paid $400 for them to clean the air filters on 7 units. That's just insane. I called them and asked them why they don't do this level of service. They said, "We'll have our front desk schedule service." Nope. We'll do it ourselves now with this great info and it will be done right. Is there much difference with the MSZ models?
Should be about the same process, Debra- keep it up!
That’s wild because cleaning the air filters takes like 2 minutes and any able bodied person could easily do it
Thank you for posting this tutorial. It helped me with cleaning my units.
The only thing I would add is that the drain pan is alot easier to reinstall if the coil mount screws are still loose on the left side of the unit. Once in place then tighten the mount screws. Regardless, very useful video. Thank you.
Wonderful, glad it helped.
This was the perfect video. I was able to follow along and managed to get my wall mounted mini split cleaned. I also have a second mini split in the house that is floor mounted, and I haven't been able to figure out how to get it opened up. Please do a video on this. It is also a mitsubishi.
Thanks Richard- sorry to hear, I haven’t met one of those yet
I have the actual service manual for this, but that did not help one bit in taking the unit apart. This video however, was exactly what was needed to quickly take the whole thing apart, including the cylindrical fan. Thank you.
I know, right? That’s why we got Mitsubishi involved in the making of the vid- they hadn’t solidified a protocol before then.
just finished cleaning of mine after 5 years of usage, thanks for the video guys, did help
Great to hear- cheers
Millions of microscopic spores are floating in the air as he is wiping the “mildew” from the drain pan. We see HVAC techs normalize mold constantly. I can see why. That drain pan should have been cleaned outside. But thank you for this video! I learn so much from your vids. Almost every time I’m looking up something to do with IAQ or home performance, I’m brought here :)
Man these guys are trained to not sat mold smh
Thanks Pete! And don’t feel too hard on these guys- they’re not trained or equipped to do many of the things we explore on this channel, and they run from hot attic to nasty crawlspace all day. One of the most terrible jobs I can imagine, frankly.
@@HomePerformance 100% agreed! These guys see the worst of the worst daily. We need to change the standards of building and stop building vented dirt crawl spaces and unconditioned attics! Not to mention, placing HVAC installs in them, duh! Ultimately though, humans need to stop neglecting their homes…
This is EXACTLY what I needed! I watched many videos that I was unhappy with before I stumbled upon yours. Thank you!
EXCELLENT to hear, Jayme!
John Thank you, very informative. I currently have a problem with the flappers. They won't open at all with the machine running.
could you please advise what the problem may be.
You should refer to your manual for troubleshooting and then hire a Mitsubishi diamond contractor.
Great video! Have installed many of these units but never needed to do a maintenance till I put one in my own house!
HAHA nice
Thank you! This gave me the confidence to clean it myself. Great instructions, marvelous engineering.
Happy to help Paul
Thanks for the run through. With the help of this a got mine spotless ( first deep clean since install 6 years ago )
NICE
Super helpful! Thank you for the great video. I was able to clean my unit myself because of your work.
That’s the dream my man
Well explained video. My Mitsubishi H2 unit was full of mold, by following this video I was able to disassemble, clean and reassemble the unit.
Excellent video! Great walk-through of how to clean these units!
Thanks Doug!
glad I found this video. I already knew how the right side came apart (cn105 access) but not the entire unit and the little wiggle tricks needed.
Man did my oldest sons u it have mold. Took 3hrs to clean all the mold and that blower was caked with dust and mold. nasty!!! seems the air filters are not adequate enough. will need to clean this yearly going forwards.
As was stated by someone else, my blower was rubbing somewhere really bad, had to push all the way right. now it rubs less, maybe I moved it too far right. next time I pull it apart I'll have to adjust it again. .. again thanks for the great video.
This was extremely helpful. I have 4 units. No issues during the process but I chose to rinse the cleaner off the coils with a garden pump thingamajig. They didnt think about it during install to cover the drain pipes on the outside with a grate or anything. Had about 6 carpenter bees in each drain pan. Dead at least.
Yuck! Nice catch!
Just took my M series apart to clean and adjust a noisy blower wheel. This video was super helpful. Thank!
So glad to hear! Congrats!
This is the best heat pump maintenance video I've ever seen precise detail well done👏👏
Thanku..
👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
It is the best video that I have seen so far, thanks for sharing.
So glad it helped you!
Great vid. Used it today to save a great deal of $ on my cleaning. First cleaning since install 2 years ago. Now I am confident enough to do this every 6 months or so. Wife is black mold toxic.
Got any advice on the rotating electric eye noise. Kind of a clicking sound.
Thank you!!! You have the best demo videos I could find + the best music. 🙂
I have 3 of these exact units and was able to thoroughly clean them thanks to this video. I really appreciate it!
Wonderful, good work
This one video saves me $800 a year. Thank you
My new heroes..I followed the video exactly and saved myself a big bill. Thank you so much. Two more to go....lol.
GOOOOOO CRYSTAL
I’ve got 4 FH units.... I blow them out with compressed air every 2 months and spray coil cleaner after every Summer.
Thank you for this video! I have the same model, so disassemble and cleaning was exactly the same. Was afraid of breaking the plastic clips, but came apart without issue. Have to wait till the summer to clean the coils like you did with the cleaner. Thx again.
They break, now what?
Thanks so much for this great tutorial! I followed along while cleaning my FH and everything was pretty much as seen. The only thing I ran into is that I had to pop off two little caps to reveal the bottom screws. I initially didn't notice the caps until I started getting the thing taken apart because they look like part of the housing. Fortunately ours didn't have any mold, however and unbeknownst to us, there was a bunch of blown in cellulose insulation that had come through where the hoses and cables pass through the wall and it filled all the spaces around i-See sensor servo.
Glad it helped
This was super helpful! We had our unit in an attic that didn't see much action before, so we hadn't cleaned it more than washing the filters over the last five years. We've used the room as an office and now a hobby room, so a lot more dust has kicked up and a cat roams around, so I finally gave it a good cleaning. It would have taken way longer without this help!
Happy to help, Tom- thanks for sharing
Thank you for the excellent video. My unit has been dripping water, with the drain pan overflowing. Do you have any tips / suggestions on cleaning / clearing the drain line from the unit? The rest of the unit seems clean.
www.oasiscoolingheating.com/blog/how-to-clean-your-condensate-drain
Helped me confirm an issue with my minisplit and identify another- it doesn't have a removable drain pan or any visible way to service the blower.
Damn
Great video gents. You saved this retiree a little money.
I wish I had known about this when I had my unit installed 4 years ago. Now I'm sure I'll have quite a bit of cleaning to do and hope I can remember most of the instructions shown
Don’t have to remember, just come back and watch anytime
I have good results with mini uv lights really keep the mildew away. This is a problem in all mini splits even when they are installed correctly
Joe Shearer if you have uv resistant plastics than ok
That was what I was wondering. That and also do the lights make it more difficult to take the blower wheel out as it'll still need to be cleaned.
Interesting idea. Be aware though that the Mitsubishi Manuals have a trouble shooting entry for yellowing of plastics. The cause is exposure to UV light...
Great Video! Thorough and easy to follow,
Great video, cleaned mine in 1 hour following this video, thanks :)
You’re welcome Zoran! Glad you found us.
Mildew also comes from not running these in Fan mode, after using as A/C, to give it time to dry, before turning it off.
Not mentioned, many health hazard warnings, on the evap cleaner foams: googles, gloves and high ventilation turnover needed when using these.
Great video. I was just about to call to have mine serviced. The outside unit has been leaking water at the bottom and is green on the fins. It was installed on a plastic platform on an unstable surface and is not level at all...by a diamond certified company BTW. They won't make good on it, and come out and get it level.
Do you have a video about cleaning the outside unit? Or can you explain to me how to do it?
Also it is winter here and quite cold can I spray the cleaner on the fins on the inside unit and just close it up or do I need to rinse it off. I mainly use it for heat, not for air conditioning. Do I have to wait till the summer to spray the coils like you did with the foam cleaner. Thx again, Viki
Hi Viki- just make sure to brush away all leaves from the backside of the condenser, and spray it down to get dust off the coil. Inside, yes, the stuff is meant to be washed off, either by automatic condensation or by you.
Can tell Mitsubishi too lol
The Mitsubishi rep should have provided a website for written instructions on this procedure.
Video was super informative. The most important information I learned was that I would never have anything that needed that much maintenance in my home. What a user unfriendly design.
My air handler is 29 y/o. My filter is a Honeywell electronic air cleaner. I get no smell and I have never cleaned the evaporator coil.
It is not very easy to clean. But for once every maybe two years, it’s not too bad. It’s also exceptionally efficient, installed easily on my house which has hot water heat and therefore no ducts whatsoever. Each room has its own thermostat. Once it’s cleaned I know it’s completely clean. That said I wish it didn’t have so many plastic nooks and crannies to clean. But tbh it’s worth the advantages of the system. Mine never smelled, even though there was some buildup of gunk. I’d be scared to see what 29 years of no cleaning looks like, have you ever looked inside there?
Great video.. thanks for the info! I'm going to be trying to clean my unit this afternoon! Wish me luck! :)
Good luck buddy! Be patient and give yourself room!
Thanks for the quick response. For inside unit should I let sit...for how long? then spray water on it, then run it on heat?
For outside the fins are green with algae, should I use same cleaner, and then rinse? I do regularly blow around, under and in it.
What about the water dripping under it is that normal?
I've seen other vids for other kinds of outdoor units where they take the top off and spray foam cleaner in... none for Mitsubishi. wonder if that would be a good idea or if it would void warranty.
Had no idea this would be such a costly maintenance when I got rid of my wood burning stove and put it in.
Yeah, everything needs maintenance- better this way than sweeping a chimney though! Yes, dripping water is normal, that’s the condensate from the humidity being pulled out from indoors (I’m guessing). No advice for the outdoor coil, I’d ask Stephen Rardon (search youtube for his channel).
Sooo glad I ran into this video. My mini-split looks horrible. I thought the only thing I needed to clean was the filter. Also, your friend in all black looks like he ain't the one to play with. Like, on ANY given day, LOL.
Glad you found us too!
great video! about to tackle my unit tomorrow... 2 questions for you: how does the drip pan just hang there? Is it made to do that (just want to be sure I don't damage it) and instead of removing the blower wheel - could I just use a soft small brush and vacuum up the debris? Not so sure I want to remove the wheel. Thanks!!
Yes, the drip pan is fitted in place and will stay attached if you get it out of the way. Trust me, take the blower wheel out. You want to wipe behind where it sits anyway, and you’ll have gone 95% of the way there already.
I did it! I was getting virtually no airflow down the entire center 80% of the unit. Nobody instructed us on routine maintenance beyond cleaning the filter every now and then so you can imagine what the fan looked like after maybe 8 years 😅
I was a little worried because it is hard to tell how much force you're applying in the video. Especially around the coil assembly I feared I might break the whole thing in the middle of summer.
Some steps require a little more than a gentle nudge but I was able to get it all cleaned and reassembled with no broken pieces and it's working like the first day again.
One thing I noticed is that it seems like it's starting to build a bit of corrosion around the right side of the unit near the drip pan around the copper coolant pipes. Like the coil fins are a bit discolored in a copper tone and there was the same color residue in the very right side of the drip pan. Is there anything that can be done about this or is this even something I gotta worry about? As long as it's not damaging the pipes and only discoloring the surroundings it's no issue but if the seal breaks it's probably a goner.
Good work buddy- don’t worry about the discoloration, mine look like that too after only 3-4 yrs.
Thank you so much for rhe tutorial/video. Indeed one of the best video/tutorial/thos is how to do it I've seen. Been having issues with water dripping and with our Hospital maintenance crews busy elsewhere I'm glad I can do this and help them out. Will be passing this to our other crew members so they can also take care of the units in their rooms. Thanks again
One last thing.... any other alternative coil cleaning that can be purchased/used by us general public? If there is, can you update us? Thank you
Interesting, Juan, and happy to help! Quick search of Amazon for ‘A/C coil cleaner’ four stars and above shows 179 results. Have fun- with that much practice, your crew will be stellar.
We were never told about the fact that this unit needs to be cleaned. The instruction booklet only mentions cleaning the filters which we do but later found the inside was filthy"
+CD Rozich I know, right!?! What is wrong with the writers of user manuals everywhere?
@@HomePerformance Who knew Mitshubishi does not make a TOTALLY maintenance free hvac?
FYI.. My five winters and going into the fifth summer is a 45% reduction in heat bill and 35% in summer cooling cost. The real story is my home no longer has issues with mildew or mold.
😎
Thanks!!! The SET SCREW!! I spent hours alternating between watching videos made by wingnuts who just wanted to sell their cleaning kit, and inhaling probable Legionella spores into my bronchioles while trying to figure it out myself before I finally found this video (cough . . .).
So glad you found us brother
@@HomePerformance Has it really been 3 years?! I guess I oughta clean it again. . . and I'm taking this vid with me. Thanks again.
clear and thorough presentation
Thx
I used your vid to irradiate the awful alpine condensate pump. Thank you!
Nice video. I have the same unit. Two questions: (the unit is 8 years old). I have dirt coming out of the unit every or every other day, dirt in the form of black/grey chunks that look like compressed dust. Could I take my leaf blower and blow through the unit to get the dirt/dust out? Could that ruin the unit? Thanks, david from Toronto
That is probably mold. I would guess when you remove the wheel it will be full of mold.
Excellent video guys! Really best one out there - very clear and helpful!
+George Mandler thx for watching and complimenting!
Thank you this helped a great deal And now my AC is cool and the unit is blowing much harder.
Wonderful! Stay fit, Dad.
Is there a drain hose on the right side of the unit that can be blown out as well? I saw the drain pan, not sure if I missed you covering the hose? My mini-split is leaking, and I'm guessing the hose for which the water drains could be clogged?
Haven’t tried blowing out, I’d use a pipe cleaner and drain pan tabs
Another thank you from me! Did this almost exactly and feels so good to have a clean unit. Mine is a slightly different model Mitsubishi, so it was a bit different, but close enough to follow. I wanted to ask what you do for the secondary drip tray in the top back of the unit? I wiped mine out as best as I could, but it is not very accessible. It was not nearly as dirty as the main drip tray, so I can see why it may be omitted, but wondered if you had any tips on cleaning back there? Thanks again!!
Glad to hear it, James!
Just cleaned 9 of these. replacing the wheel on the larger units can be a nightmare. try placing the wheel centered on the shaft (maybe add some lithium lube) and push to the right while spinning until it snaps in. Can take a lot of trial and error.
Thank so much for this video. Got some installed a month ago.
Off topic, do you think 811kWh extra for one month (27.97 kWh a day) to run 12000 and a 9000 head sound like a lot average temperature was 1C the coldest it got was -9C and 11c during the day. Good insulation in my house, had home inspectorcome for rebate for heat pump and insulation and windows. Heated my house to 18c. I have the cold climate system. As I'm in ontario. I had to have the remote set at 22C to even achieve 18c on the negative days. But on the days where it was above 0 it got up to 20c or 21c.
Just wondering if i have a refrigerant problem. My tech guy says well it blows out warm air so it is fine.
Thank again!!!! Love you video. Learning so much.
They get installed and then it feels like I'm all on my own. So got to do my own research. And your channel is my favorites for learning about split heat pumps.
Now , I need a video on how to level the unit!
Thank you for a good simple video. Would you consider posting a similar video without any music in the background? I would like to more easily hear what you are saying without music that detracts from what you are demonstrating.
I’ve done this service on my indoor head 4-5 times now, with your instructional video. But there’s something missing. What about the bank of coils in the back that faces the wall. How do you clean them effectively with the limited space due to the ceiling. Been using Viper coil cleaner but hasn’t effectively cleaned all the coils, this time around.
This helped clean my unit! Thank you!
Glad to help, cheers
This is a great, clear video, thank you. I can't wait to try it on our units, that are starting to have a musty smell.
Our unit drains to a container that is pumped up onto our roof, since it's on an inside wall. Is there any way to make sure the drain piping is cleaned out as well? And the pump, too? Also, is there a recommended distance from the ceiling for installing these units so there's enough air return above them?
Great questions! I’d clean the pump by hand and replace the drain hose if it looks old and crummy. And the clearances are in the installation manual, I’m sure, which you can download online. Good luck.
@@HomePerformance Hey did the cleaning help with the musty smell? Mine smells terrible when it is in any mode
YES, the cleaning will make it much nicer. Do it!
All is clear in the video and I’m looking forward to completing the job.
My only issue is I can’t seem to take off the piece in between to the two screws that are hidden by the screw covers. It’s the step right before pulling off the drain pan. (3:08)
This piece popped right off in the video. Is there flap in the middle?
Hi, Jonathan. I'm having the same problem. Did you figure this out?
At random yes I did figure it out. I’m glad this popped up on my alerts so I could help. I just pulled horizontally out until it came off. Maybe a slight upward pressure as you need your fingertips to slide it out. There’s a small tab that if in the worst case scenario breaks it seems the unit would still be secure with the screws on the side. This video gives a nice visual of the part and gave me confidence to be a little less gentle. I also did some translating online and it all came to “its held up by a tab” or something.
ua-cam.com/video/VjKi6WOPuCY/v-deo.html
The video is spot on. I found the set screws to be stubborn as it has never been loosened. It eventually came off. The drip pan is hard to get off and once you locate the 3 small tabs it sits on you’ll have more confidence to pull it off. I used the ladder to prop it up so it didn’t hang. The coils were tricky because they sit tight. Once you locate the tabs they sit on then it’s easier. Plus after pulling the wheel out you need to be sure the coils sit on the tab. I was worried it would fall and didn’t as long it sits on the mini tabs on the left. I’m quite the novice in regards to DIY and didn’t want to be stuck with a big bill to clean hope this helps!
The biggest PITA I find is getting the drip pan onto the unit correctly. It looks like Garret may have had trouble too as it looks like part of that video was cut???? What is the trick to get that drip pan to snap in easily?
+George Mandler no, I don't think we cut anything, but you do have to mess with it a little. I've done this twice myself since.
I laughed when I saw this post b/c I had just said the same thing, "They cut out this part out from the video!" Yes, this is the hardest part and I'm sitting here struggling with it. This is my second time doing this and both times this was the pitfall. Any other suggestions out there other than messing with it a little bit? Otherwise, this video is definitely the best out there!
Sorry, I’m about to clean mine again and will pay attention to this step and see.
I just wish it was designed so the blower wheel could be removed without having to move the coil.
Or can you slow the video down so we can see how it goes back on properly.
Thansk a lot, very good and instructive clip! Helped me to clean my own.
Thanks for the video! I have this exact same model and used it as a guide to do mine this afternoon
Always great to hear!
Do you have the FH series like the video? I did one of mine yesterday and was surprised to see rust on the right side of the coil. Also after reassembly the upper horizontal vanes don't seem to close as flush as the units I haven't taken apart yet.
yeah I do. Mine had some rust on the right side as well.. I think that's common on ductless as most of the videos I've seen have that. As for the vanes, it's not supposed to matter what position you put them back in as they should do a full sweep at startup to orient themselves
@@Cryptic-1-9-1-1
Mine do the full sweep and operate correctly, I just noticed the top vanes aren't fully closed and parallel with the front cover like the one in my son's room which hasn't been apart. I double checked and they're in right, not a big deal just being a bit particular I guess. I think the rust is normal there as well, they should have used stainless steel IMO.
Yeah I wish it was all stainless as well, but it's probably not nearly as good at heat transfer as copper and aluminum.. plus the cost :(
Wait, we're not just supposed to throw them away every few years like everything else? ;) Great stuff guys, keep it up!
Ha, Thanks P
Any advice on popping the back 4 clips for the main plastic cover? I am at that point, and not sure how/what direction to pull or push to get the big plastic cover off without snapping something.
It’s like shaving for the first time- you imagine you’re about to screw up, but then it just magically works. Let us know how you fared.
Great helpful video - thank you. Did you forget to retighten the set screw on the blower wheel?
Thanks CC.
so how do you clean the mildew out of the back end of this thing where
the final coil folds over at the top , i see it terminates in openings
at the very bottom of the unit but not into the drain pan oddly enough
I noticed the same thing in mine. I don't think there's a [reasonable] way. It looks like the only way to get back there would be to remove the coil and dismount the entire unit from the wall. I'm not in love with the design of these things tbh.
Great video... Had no idea it came apart that far... Does any maintenance need to be done to the unit that is on the outside of the home ?
Thanks! Yes. You can spray that one with a hose, easy peasy.