Stefan is currently wrestling with a 46-pound box that contains his fourth hope for a tolerable summer. The cardboard is damp with his own sweat, and the tape makes that sharp, violent screeching sound that usually signals the beginning of a domestic mistake. He’s been through this before. In fact, he’s been through this exactly 6 times if you count the two units he returned within 26 hours of purchase back in 2016. He knows the drill: the plastic window slider that never quite fits, the accordion hose that radiates heat like a dying star, and the dull, rhythmic thrum of a compressor that promises Arctic breezes but delivers a lukewarm sigh.
He isn’t a stupid man. He’s a structural engineer, someone who understands the second law of thermodynamics better than most. Yet, here he is, spending $556 on a device that is fundamentally designed to fail. We are all Stefan. We are all currently engaged in the peculiar human ritual of buying the concept of a solution while actively avoiding the reality of the problem. The portable air conditioner is the patron saint of this delusion. It exists in the gap between our desire for comfort and our refusal to commit to the friction of a permanent installation.
2016
First Returns
Recent
Current Purchase
I recently won an argument with
