N-P-Kali
Active member
Daiken, Samsung, Mitsubishi, Fugitsu..I have a few of each brand. Average price tag 3500 USD for the smaller 3-ton units, all the way up to 28500 USD for the Daiken 8-zone 6-ton. Price depends on air handler type, system configuration (multi or single zone) and cooling requirements. Remember with mini-split air conditioners you get what you pay for. Communication board wiring issues or bad run capacitors are very common problems with cheaper split units and as all of us here understand environment is 85% of the game, that being said spend more and get more. And always buy top of the line thermostats.
Daiken is by far the most efficient @ 26 SEER but is generally 2 - 3 times more expensive than any other brand, but they are the sh*t.
Samsungs are 18 - 23 SEER
Mitsubishi and Fugitsu are 18 - 23 SEER depending on model and cooling/heating capacity.
All of the above come with heat pump and dehumidifier mode.
One outdoor condenser unit with a branch box that connects line sets to (2) 18k BTU air handlers in (2) separate zones and a 12k BTU air handler in another zone without any drag. Cool, heats, dehumidifies on different schedules, day and night, simultaneously.
Samsungs are an unsung hero in the split ac category and have IMHO the most intuitive thermostat firmware.
Don't put your condenser/inverter in the attic whatever you do unless you are planning on installing a cool air passive intake with a purge fan >2500CFM otherwise when the unit is working the condenser/inverter generates considerable heat so you would be looking at 140F - 160F temperatures in your attic which very quickly will damage the compressor and communication board. Seen it happen.
Daiken is by far the most efficient @ 26 SEER but is generally 2 - 3 times more expensive than any other brand, but they are the sh*t.
Samsungs are 18 - 23 SEER
Mitsubishi and Fugitsu are 18 - 23 SEER depending on model and cooling/heating capacity.
All of the above come with heat pump and dehumidifier mode.
I have a few dual and tri-zone units and they work extremely well.Anybody rock the dual units?
One outdoor condenser unit with a branch box that connects line sets to (2) 18k BTU air handlers in (2) separate zones and a 12k BTU air handler in another zone without any drag. Cool, heats, dehumidifies on different schedules, day and night, simultaneously.
Samsungs are an unsung hero in the split ac category and have IMHO the most intuitive thermostat firmware.
Don't put your condenser/inverter in the attic whatever you do unless you are planning on installing a cool air passive intake with a purge fan >2500CFM otherwise when the unit is working the condenser/inverter generates considerable heat so you would be looking at 140F - 160F temperatures in your attic which very quickly will damage the compressor and communication board. Seen it happen.