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I'm installing 3 ductless AC units in my apartment. I know the lines are supposed to go outside and connect to the condenser but there are three coolant lines wrapped in insulation and three drain lines. I don't want to have a ton of lines on the outside of my building. Is there some logical way to do this that I'm missing? Is there a casing that would fit all 6 of these lines on the way down to the condenser? Currently my plan is to bring the lines down to the joists and have them meet up somewhere on the way to one exit hole and then I guess they would all go straight down to the condenser, but it seems like a lot and i'm just not sure...

Would it maybe make sense to bring the drain lines down to the basement and hook them into a drain line or something? So instead of 6 lines down on the outside it could be 3. In line with that thinking would it make sense to bring all the lines down to the basement and then they won't be coming down the side of the building? I'd love some input, just looking for ideas I guess.

manassehkatz-Moving 2 Codidact
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bcstryker
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  • I'm guessing that your use of the word "apartment" doesn't mean the first thing that pops into my head. This is more of a condo that you own, not something you're renting, right? Do you have access/rights to open up all the walls to run the cooling lines down the walls and into the basement? Will this go through any apartments below yours that you don't own? – FreeMan Nov 20 '20 at 12:50
  • hey yeah sorry, i own the 2 unit apartment building. many of the interior walls are open and i will be taking the ceiling of the floor below down soon. – bcstryker Nov 21 '20 at 17:41
  • Do not combine the condensate lines unless you increase the line size and have an air break prior to going into a drain. These lines are famous for having mold grow in them and any restrictions end up creating really big messes. I would not use any anything less than 1/2”/foot especially with the drain inside a wall. It takes a very tiny obstruction at the bottom to cause overflows in the inside unit. – Ed Beal Nov 23 '20 at 16:43
  • You can run the lines down an interior "pipe chase" if that works better for your building or aesthetic tastes. – Ecnerwal Dec 20 '20 at 16:30

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The condenser lines are most likely loops. Each air handler (inside device) has a refrigerant loop to circulate fluid out to the exterior condenser/chiller. If you are thinking of combining them into a common conduit of some kind, or simply covering them (like surface-mount electrical work) as they run on the walls, I think that's fine as long as the conduit/covering doesn't hold water in.

The drain lines are another matter. It's easy to connect them together into a common line. You can also direct that water into a plumbing drain. It doesn't necessarily have to go outside.

Take care to plan the drain path so they have enough slope to avoid collecting water inside them long-term. 1/4" slope per foot of drain line is a good amount. If there are low spots in the line, those can clog up with organic growth such as mold or fungus, and then the AC unit ends up dripping water instead of draining correctly.

Condensate pumps are very small pumps commonly used if you need your AC drain line to go up, for example, if it's easier to route the line through an attic than under a floor; or if you need a way to get the water back up from a basement.

Hope this helps.

Jeff Wheeler
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