Why ducted air conditioning is inefficient

Ducted air conditioning (or heating) is inefficient.

Let me explain, and see what you think. I am not a fan (pun intended) of ducted. It seems to be very inefficient. But only one in five air con sales reps seem to agree with my reasoning.

At our previous home, in Saratoga NSW, we had a large (10kW) ducted air con system upstairs, which included all the bedrooms.

When we just wanted to cool or heat one room, we tried to close the door of that room. But the door would slam shut and whistle, as the air would try to escape. The ducted air con had one or two outlets in each room’s roof. It had one shared return vent in the hall. Turning on the air con in a single room, the air needed to return to the hall to circulate. Closing the door blocked that path and made the pump work extra hard.

The thermostat was also in the hall, as part of the control unit. We could set the target temperature of a room to say 22°C, but the room might cool down to 18° before the hall thermostat would register 22°, with a temperature gradient between the two.

The system had four separate zones. One zone was shared between the master bedroom and living room. On a hot night, if we set the air con to cool our bedroom, it would also cool the open plan living room, with no one in it. I think those two rooms shared a zone to address the “don’t close the door” problem, but it increased the wasted energy problem.

We moved to Emerald, Victoria two years ago. Our home here came with ducted gas heating. Each room has an outlet (or two) in the floor, with one shared return vent and thermostat in the hall. We can close the floor outlets in each room, similar to the zoning we had for the air con. Same problems here as we had the ducted air conditioning. If we close doors, we block air flow. The thermostat can only set the target temperature for the hall, not the actual rooms.

In contrast to ducted, a split air con system has the outlet and return vent in the same room. That means that you can close the door to the room, and cool/heat just that room. The thermostat measures the temperature of that room. All is well with the world!

In addition to ducted, we also had a split air conditioner in each house. It used a fraction of the energy that a ducted system would, even when ducted was zoned for just one room.

When I recently asked several companies for a quote to install air conditioning, most suggested a ducted system. My internal dialog was “Are you crazy? How can you still suggest ducted?” I But I politely filtered. They would tell me about zoning and the possibility of two return vents and so on. But when I asked “can I close the door?”, the answer was still no. Or I had to explain why you can’t close the door. One guy (for whom I actually have a lot of respect) said “yeah, ducted uses more power, but you have excess solar power on hot days”. I think he forgot about hot evenings and cold overcast days.

One advantage of a ducted system is having a shared central compressor. For a five room system, that means one compressor fan alongside the house. Individual split systems would have five compressors, which can be ugly.

Fortunately, one alternative is to install a multi head split air conditioning system. This shares one compressor across all the five heads (in each room). Each room still has its own combined outlet and return, and its own thermostat. When one head is already running, turning on a second head starts very quickly, because the compressor is already running.

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80 comments

  1. Vincent Lui via Facebook ↗
    I'm so glad my house has 5 individual splits. Very fortunate that the compressors are very well hidden
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  2. Yes, ducted is way less efficient, and near to impossible to update at a later stage.

    Individual split systems are far more efficient, and can easily be updated to a newer (more efficient) unit at any time, or replaced if faulty.
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    1. David Nye no… replacements are just as expensive

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    2. And then they lose half their efficiency in the ducting!
      You do realise that’s not taken into account ….
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    3. Our three phase ducting in our previous house in Saratoga might have been "efficient" by some standard, but it used high power (kW) to run it, which was my ultimate measurement.

      My main point is that, if you can't close off a room, then it's terribly inefficient, compared to a split system.
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    4. Thomas Begeng they would be pretty poor split systems then. Our Daikin split system is EER 5.00 / COP 5.09, and our Daikin multi split is 3.91 / 4.72.
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    5. David Nye why is ducted "near to impossible to update". I'm an aircon service tech and the company I work for swaps out old ducted systems every day.

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    6. Our splits are waaay more efficient than ANY ducted system.
      Further, because you’re running small units ONLY in occupied rooms, you save even more.

      We have friends with an older ducted system. It was costing a small fortune to run, and then the quote they had to update to a new more efficient unit was beyond massive, and also required removing part of the roof plus crane hire!
      They finally gave up in disgust and fitted a number of small splits and have never looked back. There’s just no comparison.

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  3. Alice Chiew via Facebook ↗
    Thank you. Had the same conversation when I said is never have ducted again. Response / how do you propose to heat the house? I said reverse cycle. Was told going to be very expensive. Is that true?

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    1. Alice Chiew it's not expensive.
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      1. Anthony Long we have several split systems and gas floor hydronic - we avoid turning the floor heating on until the dead of winter as it costs a fortune compared to heating with split systems - but in fairness its nice to have warm tiles :)
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      2. Anthony Long that’s what I thought but nothing like being dismissed 🙂

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    2. Alice Chiew Hi 👋. "Expensive" is subjective, of course. Our recent quotes were cheaper for split air conditioners (per room, or multihead) were slightly cheaper than the quotes for ducted. I'l post separately about what we have installed.
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      1. Tesla Tripping that is true but I guess it’s about what’s more important. I agree with your original post. I’m also sensitive to dust so for all those reasons, I’d prefer split.

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  4. Sam SD via Facebook ↗
    We went with daikin multi head splits in every room. We did this 8 years ago. I can confirm that the multi head splits have been fantastic. We used to have a 20kw 3 phase ducted unit that was from 1999.
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    1. Thomas Begeng Wow, 1.5kW is impressive for ducted. Of course it depends what that is actually doing.

      Are you able to close the door to your bedroom and only cool, heat that room, or does the air have to flow out to the return in the hall somewhere? What about the other rooms?

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  5. Dynky Moke via Facebook ↗
    Thanks for that info, we will hopefully be removing our gas ducted heating and replacing it with either ducted system or splits either single units or multi, splits are looking good but with a multi split do they run the pipework in the ceiling space to each inside unit as some rooms may have the head unit on an internal wall?
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    1. Dynky Moke I'm no expert on installation, but having watched our recent install, it seems to me that there was no difference in duct work caused by multi vs separate split systems. In each case, there is a head in the room, and a compressor outside. With multi, the pipe work from each head goes to one shared compressor, but I don't know where the join is. I will post about our installation in a an upcoming post, here on our blog.

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  6. James Redgrove via Facebook ↗
    Depends on your goals. I’m in Brisbane. We have a new house with ducted a/c. Each room has its own zone and temp sensor and we can switch those off if not in use. Keeps the whole house a consistent temp with no cold or hot spots. The only change I would make is to have a split in the bedroom so we can shut the ducted down at night.
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    1. James Redgrove Good summary. Ducted is good at setting a consistent temp through the whole house. But not so good at cooling just one room (or two), especially since you can't shut the door on ducted.

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      1. Marco Fulco via Facebook ↗
        You can shut doors but you’ll need return air vents in each room.
        It can be done.
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      2. Marco Fulco Yeah, return vents in each room seemed logical to me. But no-one I asked could offer it. They would just say "zoning" which is not the same as being able to close a door. I suspect that including a return vent in each room would blow out cost, and they'd try to talk us out of it.
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      3. Tesla Tripping this is managed through “constant” zone(s) the no of which depends on the size of the system and size of house. For us we have 3 and are all in the open areas of the house where the return is. We can turn them off but the system can turn them back on as needed to balance the system. No impact on keeping doors open or closed.

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      4. James Redgrove Do you have a return in the room? If not then you need the door open (or a gap, or a vent) for the air to get from the room to the outlet, yes? And there's the inefficiency.

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  7. Jonathan Prendergast via Facebook ↗
    I like the simplicity, control and transparency of split systems. There are lots of small things that can go wrong and derail the effectiveness of ducted

    https://newenergythinking.com/2018/10/20/dont-use-ducts/
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    1. Jonathan Prendergast Great link, thank you. And thank you Richard Keech. I have added it to my post.

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  8. Robert Pepper via Facebook ↗
    I agree with your post except the "don't buy" part which I'd suggest should be "consider not buying". In my case, I don't have a zillion different zones, and I don't want the physical protusion of a split inside any room, so ducted makes sense for me especially as it was cheaper than multiple splits. I also have enough solar to max the aircon on hot days, with loads left over to charge the battery, and Globird gives me 4 hours free per day. So for me, ducted makes sense. But I do agree with your wider points that the advantages of splitties are not often explained.
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    1. Robert Pepper Good points., I've changed the intro line to "Ducted air conditioning (or heating) is inefficient."

      I agree that ducted generally looks better.

      Excess solar on hot sunny days is a natural fit to crank up the air conditioning, as you said.

      Our previous home's ducted air con was okay to run during the sunny days, and still charge the battery. But it drained the battery in an hour or two after the sun went down in the evening and the heat remained. On cold overcast days, we didn't have the excess solar to run the heating.

      Our current home's ducted gas heating, of course only ran on cold days. It also used about 1kW of electricity just for the fans, which benefited slightly from the solar and battery, but production was low on those cold days.
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      1. Tesla Tripping yes I think the main thing is to understand the options and tradies are generally quite bad at explaining options. User forums are often better and explanations like yours.
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  9. This!! We have 7 individual splits in a 4BR two story house, its so much more efficient to only heat/cool the areas being used - especially since becoming empty nesters so upstairs is now largely unoccupied most of the time, it allows for the substantially different heating and cooling profiles of the different areas to be accurately matched - more cooling upstairs in summer, more heating downstairs in winter, cooler bedrooms at night, etc - adding sensibo controllers to each room to add automation and monitoring helps too - and by not having a multi head it’s easier to deal with the mild seasons time where you may still want heat downstairs but cool upstairs, and if a unit fails - you lose one room/area until repaired rather than the whole house… and 5kW of solar to help running costs in summer (and off peak EV plan to help running costs overnight)…
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    1. Thomas Begeng holy hell man do you have shares in ducted systems or something?

      You are copy/pasting the same reply multiple times!

      You still haven't addressed the issue in that you have to have your doors open for the return air...
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    2. Craig Butterworth Sensibo controllers are great. I am currently experimenting with four different app controller mechanisms (including Sensibo).

      Ah yes, good catch. A multihead system can set a different target temperature for each room, but they all have be cooling or heating, not a mix. Same for ducted. Individual split systems are completely independent.

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      1. Tesla Tripping yep - drives me nuts in one of the theatres we look after - the control room at the top of the theatre shares a multi head with dressing rooms - in winter its hotter than satin’s armpit in the control room but the heating is on in the dressing rooms so we can’t access cooling in the control room…
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    3. Thomas Begeng You _can_ keep the doors shut, but you shouldn't. Because:
      1. It's fighting the system. The system is designed to circulate air. It comes out of the outlet in the room and has to go back to the return/inlet in the hall. If you close the door, you're blocking the system.
      2. You can feel the door slam shut as you close it. That's the air pressure pushing it, because the air wants to get out.
      3. The amount of force is a function of the air flow and the gap around the door. If the gap is large, then you won't block as much, but that defeats the point of closing the door.
      4. A small child won't be able to open the door. At least in our previous house, the force on the door was that strong.
      5. You can hear the wind whistling as it tries to escape the room through the door cracks.
      6. The pump is working overtime to overcome the blockage of the door. More power usage and more strain.
      7. Whether the door is open or closed, the air still has to return to the inlet in the hall. So, you're not just heating/cooling the room, but all the space along the way, which is logically inefficient.

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  10. No, ducted is superior. Filtration is better, far less maitneance, better air distribution and units tend to last longer.
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    1. Anthony Long via Facebook ↗
      Michael Borowik oh. It's you again. The moron.

      Massive markup on ducted systems is there?

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    2. Michael Borowik Possibly valid points about filtration etc. But my post was about efficiency.
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      1. Tesla Tripping they are efficient…

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  11. Atmaj Patel via Facebook ↗
    100% agree, I already had 4 splits on upper floor and nothing on ground. Looking at investment and ease of using, I went for 18 KW multi-head on ground floor having 3 split units under govt scheme. Now I have 8 individual zones to control for heating and cooling - Most efficient.
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  12. Steve Jenko via Facebook ↗
    We have 2 ducted evap coolers, split the house in half. Very rarely need to use the 2 single room ACs in summer, only once the humidity get over 75%. Very low power usage, and can leave them running at a low setting on warmish nights. Can shut the doors, but need to leave windows slightly open. Have powered roller shutters, so no privacy issues at night. We have solar & batteries, which are always full before dark, so if the power goes off we're still OK. We are fu*ked if the water gets shut off!🤣Then again, we have a water tank, so could plumb that up.
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    1. Steve Jenko Great insight about evaporative cooling. Thanks.

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  13. Brett Hangan via Facebook ↗
    Ducted heating best thing ever, every room toast or zone them off or shut vents etc, i like splitty if humid weather for cooling but generally ducted is fine

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    1. Brett Hangan I agree that ducted can make every room toasty. But my issue is with the efficiency. If I just want to be toasty (or cool) in specific rooms, ducted seems terribly inefficient, mainly because I can't shut the door on those rooms.

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      1. Tesla Trippingshut the vents

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      2. Tesla Tripping I instead shut the doors to the rooms whose zones I've turned off. It creates a selected rooms plus living area conditioned zone. The air return is closer to the bedrooms, so just selecting even one of the bedrooms is enough to mostly ignore the temp in the living area. The ducted unit ramps down fairly quickly when I do this. Quiet, efficient and less fuss.
        We'd have more trouble remembering to turn off individual splits unless we went for smart units - but then, if spending on smarts might as well go airtouch.

        Until the kid becomes a teenager and gets a penchant for having his door closed all the time, we will be fine. ;) Actually - just run the adjoining room zone too and it won't make any noticeable difference to the overall power consumption.

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  14. Daniel Rond via Facebook ↗
    I steered away from ducted when installing AC to my home last December.
    We have a 9.9kw split system in the main room and two spilts in two bedrooms (5.5kw and 3.5kw)
    Other rooms are not generally used so we isolated them off.

    System works very well.
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  15. James Auriti via Facebook ↗
    Individual temp sensor per zone + return grille in each room/ Zone would have fixed that.

    Theres pros and cons to both.

    Ducted.
    1 unit.
    Oversized if only using one zone.
    No redundancy.
    But is quieter in each room.
    Only 1 system to service and maintain.
    Only need to find somewhere for 1 outdoor unit.

    Both have their place depending on whats important to you.
    I have had both on the past and used to be an advocate for individual splits.
    Until I had ducted and experienced how much quieter and subtle the system is.
    I will always go ducted as its quieter with a cleaner look and does blow air in your face haha.

    A multi head gives you the joys of multiple indoors to one outdoor.
    No redundancy if outdoor fails, louder in each room.as opposed to ducted and servicing is usually charge per the indoor.
    I personally wouldn't not put 1 in a house, they're better serving for unit block/ multi residential where outdoor areas are scarce.

    To each their own and you just need to work out whats important to you.
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    1. James Auriti Good points. All valid. But none address efficiency. Thanks for the perspective.

      Is "a return grille in each room" a realistic option with ducted? I have never seen it done or offered (but I am no installation/sales expert).
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      1. Tesla Tripping
        I would suggest having 1 indoor fan motor/ compressor as opposed to 6-8 individual smaller ones would be more efficient - provided you are using it at rated capacity.
        One split to do one room will be more efficient than an essentially oversized ducted for that one room.

        If you are going to use the ducted at capacity however, it would be more efficient as you dont have so many losses in efficiency.

        A return in each room/ Zone is possible.
        Most people just dont want to pay the extra associated or dont like the idea of an extra grille in each room.
        Many will just install a door grille should they find the room becomes pressurised (but that then has privacy issues as sound can travel through quite easily)

        Like I said. Each pro has an associated con.
        It just depends on what is important to the end consumer.

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      2. I suspect you're correct, that using one compressor (such as for a ducted system) is more efficient than using 6-8 individual ones. But, that would only be true if you are comparing heating/cooling the entire house. Ducted might be pretty good at doing the whole house. But my point is that it's very inefficient at targeting just particular rooms. Sales people don't seem to warn shoppers that they can't/shouldn't close the door on their bedroom, when using ducted.

        As you said, adding a return grilled to each room is theoretically a solution, but it seems that next to no-one actually does that.
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  16. Drew Bleakley via Facebook ↗
    I believe the ducted looks a lot tidier and works very well but if you have an issue or the unit shits itself you have no heating or cooling normally on the hottest or coldest of days/nights where if you have split systems if 1 stops you still have another 5 or 6 to rely on
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  17. You know you can put sensors in each room for efficiency as well as add return airs to rooms. But great story.
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    1. Lee Mckibbin Thanks. I've yet to see a company offer to install a return air in each room. The closest they've come is to have a return in two locations "near" different rooms.

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      1. Tesla Tripping it's definitely not standard but can be done. I added one to my main bedroom for this reason.

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  18. Peter Wrightson via Facebook ↗
    Put zone bypass in the ceiling space from supply to return, plus have ITC sensors for each zone/room. Airtouch supports most units and supports the above. You’re welcome, you can close the door.

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  19. Drewfus BigMac via Facebook ↗
    Yep agreed. We have a Daikin 10kW multi split with 5 internal systems, along with a separate Daikin 5kW split system for the kitchen / living / dining. Very efficient in our 8.2 EER house. We can have all 6 units on, they just tick over, hardly using any power at all (well under 1kW). Had ducted in a previous house, wouldn't do that again.
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  20. Kevin Williamson via Facebook ↗
    Problem was cheap install,should have return air in each room or at least a supply air near return grille on landing and operating error as well

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  21. Kevin Williamson via Facebook ↗
    My place is 300sq mths and run whole house at 4amps 24/7 in summer

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  22. Neil Craven via Facebook ↗
    Ducted all the way. Plenty of solar to drive it.
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  23. Brent Drysdale via Facebook ↗
    With the split or multi-split heat pumps (cooling or heating depending on setting) you can have cassette type indoor units in each room or at least the ones where you don't want the intrusion/bulk of a wall mount internal head unit. Typically these cost more than a wall mount head unit though and will usually be a designed rather than simple head on the inside and outdoor unit on the opposite side of the wall.
    Two thingsto note for a multi-split system:
    - you cannot have cooling and heating on at the same time. All cooling or all heating but as you say some can be left turned off.
    - the other thing is that each head unit needs to drain condensation when cooling. In our house this means a return pump for that water back to the outer unit up to 20m away (~66ft). In our initial setup these have been solenoid pumps which are far too noisy. Still getting this resolved.
    Other than that works great.
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    1. Brent Drysdale Helpful info. Thanks.

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  24. Neil Craven via Facebook ↗
    Maximum efficiency would be to move to a climate that is neither too warm or too cold and does not have much humidity. Failing that worry less about efficiency and make the climate in the house what you want. Insulation and thermally broken double glazed windows and doors will make a bigger difference than system A v system B.

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  25. I have ducted and don't have any of the problems you discussed. I have a return vent and sensor in each room. Every zone stays within 0.5⁰C of the temperature I set for it. I also have a seperate zone for every room, including bathrooms and the attic.

    Over summer we ran our aircon 24/7 and our electricity bill was only $120 higher than usual and we don't have solar or a battery.

    Granted, individual wall splits have some advantages over ducted, but ducteds also have some advantages over wall splits. Every house and every client has their own priorities that determine the best system for them.

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    1. Alex Lee Wow, that’s great. Yours is the first ducted system I’ve seen that has a return vent in each room. They certainly aren’t the standard offering.

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      1. Tesla Tripping you've gotta ask for it. I installed my own system so I did it the way I wanted.

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  26. David Posavec via Facebook ↗
    Separate split system units are the way to go. You don't need huge units, zoning is easy, and you don't have all your eggs in one basket.
    We had 5 inverter splits. 2.5kws in bed rooms and a 5.2kw in the lounge. 4 out of the 5 had wifi control. It was a 182m2 home.
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  27. Stephen Bell via Facebook ↗
    Interesting no-one has raised the elephant in the room with regards to ducted vs splits and that is the inbuilt redundancy of splits. One Gecko or other pest or their excrement is enough to kill the logic board of any AC but at least with splits if one rooms AC dies you've still got others to rely on to stay comfortable. I love the clean, sleek installation of ducted but just cant get past what three neighbours and family members have had to suffer through when their ducted AC compressor units have been killed this way. 6-9 months wait for parts and repair is ridiculous but I suppose a spare logic board could be purchased for a faster fix.
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  28. Mike Sacher via Facebook ↗
    I don't understand why the ducted doesn't have valves in the ducting so that rooms can be shut off as necessary and the feeding fan speed can be changed to suit the output flow required. Is that too complicated for companies to figure out or they just want to sell outdated, expensive crap?

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  29. my air or air touch with room sensors would solve most of your issues. Undercut the doors to allow airflow back to the return, or you could put balancing ducts in but these are more often used in commercial applications.

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    1. Jason Dickens Cutting the doors is effectively opening the doors a smidge. The air is still leaving the room, flowing down the hall to the return, which is the inefficiency.

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      1. Tesla Tripping ahhh we can't add screenshots, it's actually the opposite if you only have 1 return air vent, you keep door open

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  30. Scotland Burr via Facebook ↗
    Ducted is better when you need a second room conditioned. The post above documents a poorly planned and i stalled system.

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    1. Scotland Burr Better how? The main point of the post is that almost all ducted systems require flow of air from each room to a hall return, which is inherently inefficient, compared to circulating the air within a closed room.

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  31. 2 points:
    1. We have an 11kW ducted system supplying 6 zones. The fridgie who came to service it the one time told us it's slightly undersized but would be fine if we ran up to 4 zones at a time. Practical experience with it confirms that. Running to all 6 zones still works, just slower. Power draw is just about 2.5kW or less after it's peak startup power draw. On milder days it'd be drawing very little, just over 1kW or so. That's not bad for the fact we'd never need less than 2 rooms conditioned, typically 3 at a time.

    2. CO2 levels. We long suspected, but then measured it too. CO2 levels climb quickly with doors closed, even with fans etc to try and displace and ventilate it. With the ducted aircon on or on fan mode, the CO2 in the sleeping areas are much milder. My partner is the more sensitive sleeper and seemed to notice a difference, but this may be multiple factors. I'm just glad to not be sleeping in higher CO2 concentrations.

    So, there. Closed doors actually don't work for us. Maybe someone has clever heat recovery ventilation mechanisms on their passive house, not us. Might work for them to keep doors closed. Most days of the year, we sleep with the aircon off, even in winter. In summer, the central fans are left on to keep cycling the air. With the natural leaks etc and it sucking up the low CO2 air from the living areas, it keeps the overall CO2 levels much lower.

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    1. PK Saxena 1kW power, with ducted, to maintain temperature sounds amazing! Yes stale air (CO2) is an important consideration, but that still applies in a room with no cooling/heating. It's been interesting to get notifications from my Sensibo about air quality, such as when we've had outside doors closed for a long time, or ran the gas stovetop, or the neighbours fired up their wood burner.
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      1. Tesla Tripping only on mild days. More extreme days it's about twice as much.

        Yeah, the stale air issue... It's even incredible how not used to smelling fumes one gets after only EVs at home.
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    2. The coefficient of performance for the average ducted is 2 to 3. Small split systems can be over 5. So you can double the amount of heat or cold per kWh just from COP.

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  32. Keith R Mitchell via Facebook ↗
    Need an Actron esp.. but you will pay through the nose for your efficiency. And you would still need doors open for return air. Unless you want to pay for returns in every room..
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  33. Christopher David Hallett via Facebook ↗
    I bought a nice new car that claimed to have great fuel economy, but after I drove it everywhere in reverse I found that I wasn't getting the same fuel economy - it must be the cars fault!

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  34. Darnson Farnsworth via Facebook ↗
    When we were building our townhouse in Thailand, I was originally planning on doing a big ducted system. The salesman talked me out of it and we went for 4 individual units instead (lounge and 3 bedrooms). I think it worked out for the best. At our place in Sydney (just renting), it has ducted air with a very old looking outdoor 3 phase unit. I think it needs re-gassing because the air that comes out doesn’t get cold. I don’t use it because of how the sections are split up. I have 2 portable a/c units instead (the ones that have the duct go out the window).
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