If you’ve already signed the contract and the installer is scheduled for , is it too late to ask if your neighbor is going to hate you for the next fifteen years?
It’s an uncomfortable question, usually buried under the excitement of finally fixing that one bedroom that feels like a Finnish sauna in . We spend weeks obsessing over SEER ratings (the Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio, or a measure of how much cooling you get for every watt of electricity consumed) and debating the aesthetics of the indoor wall unit.
We map out the BTU requirements (British Thermal Units, the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree) with the precision of a NASA flight engineer. But we almost never map the sound. Specifically, we don’t map where that sound goes once it leaves our property and enters someone else’s.
The salesperson closes the sale, and you’re thrilled. You’ve just bought of climate-controlled bliss. But a week after the install, as the sun dips low and the first real heat wave of the season settles in, your neighbor closes her window.
She doesn’t do it because she’s cold; she does it because the rhythmic thrum of your new condenser-located just from
