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  • 12000-BTU 22.7 SEER Bosch Pro Pack Single Zone Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner & Heater 230-Volt W/ No Line Set $968.59 + Free Shipping
frontpage Posted by htp182 | Staff • Yesterday
frontpage Posted by htp182 | Staff • Yesterday

12000-BTU 22.7 SEER Bosch Pro Pack Single Zone Ductless Mini Split AC & Heater

+ Free Shipping

$968.60

$3,155

69% off
Amazon
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Deal Details
Amazon has 12000-BTU 22.7 SEER Bosch Pro Pack Single Zone Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner & Heater 230-Volt W/ No Line Set for $968.59. Shipping is free.

Note: Usually ships within 3 to 5 days

Thanks to Deal Hunter htp182 for sharing this deal.

Product Details
  • Compact and Aesthetic: Modern indoor air handler designed to fit virtually anywhere
  • No duct-work required, making for quick and convenient professional installation
  • 12,000 BTU 230V System heats and cools a single space up to 600 sq ft
  • 12,000 BTU cooling capacity and provides heat with outdoor temps down to -13 degrees F (provides cooling up to 122 degrees F outdoors)
  • Requires Professional Installation

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by htp182 | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 12000-BTU 22.7 SEER Bosch Pro Pack Single Zone Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner & Heater 230-Volt W/ No Line Set for $968.59. Shipping is free.

Note: Usually ships within 3 to 5 days

Thanks to Deal Hunter htp182 for sharing this deal.

Product Details
  • Compact and Aesthetic: Modern indoor air handler designed to fit virtually anywhere
  • No duct-work required, making for quick and convenient professional installation
  • 12,000 BTU 230V System heats and cools a single space up to 600 sq ft
  • 12,000 BTU cooling capacity and provides heat with outdoor temps down to -13 degrees F (provides cooling up to 122 degrees F outdoors)
  • Requires Professional Installation

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by htp182 | Staff

Community Voting

Deal Score
+16
Good Deal
Get Deal at Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Bosch Pro Pack Single Zone 12000-BTU 22.7 SEER Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner and Heater 230-Volt with No Line Set

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 12/26/2024, 01:00 PM
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Amazon$968.59
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Top Comments

For a couple hundred more, you can get a Mr. Cool with precharged lines for much easier installation.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/MRCOO.../314675751

This was just one of the top links from a search. Might be able to find it on sale.
For better deal comparison , it appears Lowe's sold this for $1200 before it was discontinued , they now have a slightly higher efficiency version for $1300.

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Bosch-Pr...5014344521
You have to buy the copper lines separate?! I feel like these things all come from china and there is very little difference in quality. You can get a costway for half this with lines.

I installed one in northern colorado where the worst it gets is -15 on a very cold night but there are day where it doesnt go above 10, and those people are thrilled. Its really only for a garage that got converted to a family room and the rest of the house has gas heat, no one sleeps in there.

53 Comments

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1 day ago
1,436 Posts
Joined Sep 2018
1 day ago
1,436 Posts
Slickdeal? Enough heat for westchester county new york? Thank you
1 day ago
882 Posts
Joined Sep 2015
1 day ago
RyanJ7344
1 day ago
882 Posts
For better deal comparison , it appears Lowe's sold this for $1200 before it was discontinued , they now have a slightly higher efficiency version for $1300.

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Bosch-Pr...5014344521
1 day ago
1,396 Posts
Joined May 2006
1 day ago
UltraLazer
1 day ago
1,396 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank UltraLazer

You have to buy the copper lines separate?! I feel like these things all come from china and there is very little difference in quality. You can get a costway for half this with lines.

I installed one in northern colorado where the worst it gets is -15 on a very cold night but there are day where it doesnt go above 10, and those people are thrilled. Its really only for a garage that got converted to a family room and the rest of the house has gas heat, no one sleeps in there.
2
1
about 23 hours ago
877 Posts
Joined May 2011
about 23 hours ago
charredangel
about 23 hours ago
877 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank charredangel

Quote from UltraLazer :
You have to buy the copper lines separate?! I feel like these things all come from china and there is very little difference in quality. You can get a costway for half this with lines.

I installed one in northern colorado where the worst it gets is -15 on a very cold night but there are day where it doesnt go above 10, and those people are thrilled. Its really only for a garage that got converted to a family room and the rest of the house has gas heat, no one sleeps in there.

For a couple hundred more, you can get a Mr. Cool with precharged lines for much easier installation.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/MRCOO.../314675751

This was just one of the top links from a search. Might be able to find it on sale.
3
1
about 23 hours ago
57 Posts
Joined Dec 2018
about 23 hours ago
rcs1957
about 23 hours ago
57 Posts
Quote from UltraLazer :
You have to buy the copper lines separate?! I feel like these things all come from china and there is very little difference in quality. You can get a costway for half this with lines.I installed one in northern colorado where the worst it gets is -15 on a very cold night but there are day where it doesnt go above 10, and those people are thrilled. Its really only for a garage that got converted to a family room and the rest of the house has gas heat, no one sleeps in there.
The reason the vast majority of these systems don't come with lines is because every installation is significantly different and the manufacturer does not know what length of line you need.
1
about 23 hours ago
573 Posts
Joined Jun 2013
about 23 hours ago
SweetT23
about 23 hours ago
573 Posts
Quote from rcs1957 :
The reason the vast majority of these systems don't come with lines is because every installation is significantly different and the manufacturer does not know what length of line you need.

Exactly this. Plus the cost per foot varies greatly with time. So way too risky for a company to keep that much stock
about 23 hours ago
20 Posts
Joined Jul 2017
about 23 hours ago
omgktran
about 23 hours ago
20 Posts
Quote from UltraLazer :
You have to buy the copper lines separate?! I feel like these things all come from china and there is very little difference in quality. You can get a costway for half this with lines.

I installed one in northern colorado where the worst it gets is -15 on a very cold night but there are day where it doesnt go above 10, and those people are thrilled. Its really only for a garage that got converted to a family room and the rest of the house has gas heat, no one sleeps in there.

I've installas 3 mini splits and they all come with enough extra nutsa and hose i can make another lineset. This a W.

The costways are only rated to 5degrees cold not -5. just 5. Fine if you don't live in the cold.

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about 23 hours ago
1,396 Posts
Joined May 2006
about 23 hours ago
UltraLazer
about 23 hours ago
1,396 Posts
Quote from rcs1957 :
The reason the vast majority of these systems don't come with lines is because every installation is significantly different and the manufacturer does not know what length of line you need.

Most of these systems are precharged and since that charge is fixed, the length of the lines are fixed. Having a professional charge these things is like 1000$
2
about 23 hours ago
722 Posts
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about 23 hours ago
JasonS1468
about 23 hours ago
722 Posts

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Quote from UltraLazer :
Most of these systems are precharged and since that charge is fixed, the length of the lines are fixed. Having a professional charge these things is like 1000$

$1000? Yer getting ripped off.
1
1
about 23 hours ago
575 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
about 23 hours ago
Elon-Mickey
about 23 hours ago
575 Posts
How difficult is to add a 240v line? We would love to get this installed in our living room which is above unconditioned garage, it's freezing cold in the winter.
about 22 hours ago
5,939 Posts
Joined May 2007
about 22 hours ago
DonV1962
about 22 hours ago
5,939 Posts
Quote from UltraLazer :
Most of these systems are precharged and since that charge is fixed, the length of the lines are fixed. Having a professional charge these things is like 1000$
I did some pretty thorough research on that and that may be true to a certain extent but there is padding built in and in most cases unless you need an extremely long line it is not a problem. Some of manufacturers note it and others don't way down in the specs you may not see in the manaual given. People and techs that spoke with manufacturer's technical CSRs were informed of it. Many AC guys seem aware of it and will tell you the same thing. The friend I used to purge my system told me I was worrying way to much and he has been in his field many many years.

On things like this most manufacturers would rather you not be playing with the line sets and such as it may cause some problem that the customer then wants the manufacturer to warrant or pay for. They make literature and directions that stress warnings and try to dissuade form such but they may be a bit overblown. Much like Apple locks down stuff so you can not play or service it yet those that know the real technicalities can.

I'm not saying going on stupid and winging it and it is all a bit serious but can be done by taking time to figure it all out. I stressed over mine for months and in hindsight think it wasted energy and unnecessary stress and I felt stupid when the guy that knew the field and technicalities was much less concerned.
1
about 22 hours ago
552 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
about 22 hours ago
Rudedog7
about 22 hours ago
552 Posts
Home Depot has deal of the day with Mr cool and other brands that include the line sets for cheaper.
1
about 22 hours ago
10 Posts
Joined Jul 2018
about 22 hours ago
aoifsan
about 22 hours ago
10 Posts
who is the oem midea or gree?
about 22 hours ago
5,939 Posts
Joined May 2007
about 22 hours ago
DonV1962
about 22 hours ago
5,939 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DonV1962

Quote from Elon-Mickey :
How difficult is to add a 240v line? We would love to get this installed in our living room which is above unconditioned garage, it's freezing cold in the winter.
It can be difficult but it is not rocket science. If your panel box is nearby it can be pretty easy. The worst part is finding a way to run the line. That can have you poking some holes and the wall and drilling holes through studs but again that is not super hard.

You will have to know how and have the tools to do the wire running and wall patching of needed but again nothing super expensive or technical in that. Running wire and and outlets only requires a few basic skills and not that many tools.

There is a very prevalent and I think horrible myth that DIY and/or professionals have some secret knowledge, power or innate talent that normal humans lack but it is not true. It is like anything else diving in and learning can make you proficient just like getting good at math or studying and learning about anything. They just take the time to learn and plan out the job like you would a party to make sure they have the knowledge, tools and material you need. We kind of just wing it at at times and have to learn the best way by doing.

Common sense and the ability to read and follow directions makes a professional yet they run into things they may have to puzzle out. You are living on the perfect world as you can sit down at a desk and have world of knowledge, help, how tos and tips at your fingertips. It used to be much harder to reach the shared knowledge of all of humanity.

Don't get me wrong maybe it is just not your thing and if I had always had good money and unlimited funds I may have well turned my back on learning the skills I now have accumulated but in hindsight consider it a blessing. I had to learn how to do things as I could not afford to pay someone to do them.

I see so many people that can not afford it hiring some supposed professional that get a shoddy job that it is kind of sickening. Even if you do not want to do a particular job you still should research so as to not get ripped off. The trades will play up the technicalities as they would rather get your money than see you do it yourself. They have some point but when you consider that something that might cost you $40 and some time researching and reading might cost a $500 if done by a business or tradesman. Even honest businesses or tradesman have much overhead to deal with and that $100 job may be a fair and reasonable price but most of my life I just could not afford to do such.

Other tradesman and salesmen will come to you and tell you there is something wrong when it may not be. They will charge exorbitant and unreasonable prices for things that cost little and take minutes. I have met numerous people that have paid over $500 to have a $30 door lockset installed.

Knowledge is power and even if you do not want to do that project yourself do take the time to figure out what is involved and what it should cost. You can if you think you can skip the whole buyer beware thing and tackle some stuff yourself if you have modicum of physicals and mental ability. Fair warning t can be frustrating and kind of opening a can of worms you are not ready for but that is exactly what the tradesman and professionals do and did to get to be where they are.

If you take some time to learn, get a plan together, plod along and figure out as you go you might be able to do more than you think you are capable of. You may also break something else or make something worse at times but being in the trades I see that done all the time by the professionals but they find some way to bill the customer for it.
Last edited by DonV1962 December 25, 2024 at 11:52 AM.
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about 21 hours ago
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about 21 hours ago
kjggx6
about 21 hours ago
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Could this push a 950 square foot garage to maintain around 50 or 55? I'm in the Midwest so the standard winter day is about 35 but it can get as low as -10 if a polar vortex pushes through