I hoped to put a ductless mini split out there, but they’re considerably more lavish than new window A/Cs
I’m strapped for cash for the next few weeks because I had to drain my savings account to repair my grass mower. I have a small landscaping supplier and rely on my zero gravity mower for 50 to 60 minutes of labor every week while in the peak growing season. If it’s raining constantly, that means grasss are amassing at a considerable rate. And if I don’t stay on top of my schedule, I’ll lose angry clients who are wondering why their grass is getting tall and why I haven’t showed up yet. Needless to say, I paid for the repairs and was just glad to get my mower back in time to finish enough of the grasss that I was behind on while in the previous weekend. I don’t mind laboring 7-day weeks if it means keeping my loyal clients. Unblessedly, this means that I can’t upgrade the window A/C in my garage to a ductless mini split love I was originally hoping. I have a side hustle where I sell handmade jewelry on the internet. It’s not a consistent hobby because I am usually consumed by my landscaping business, but I will labor in my garage on new projects when there is time. That’s why I initially put a window A/C out there, as it gets drastically hot in the Summer when the door is shut and there is no cross breeze. I hoped to put a ductless mini split out there, but they’re considerably more lavish than new window A/Cs. I can get a new window A/C for under $300 that will fit the window in my garage, but a nice ductless mini split is going to run at least $3,000 by contrast. That’s another zero with all things considered!
A ductless mini split is going to cost a lot more than a window A/C