They also made a crapton of noise. The hotels often didn’t change the filter, so you’d instantly get a stuffy nose when you walked in. They were always right under the curtain, so it would recirculate the air caught in the curtain and cycle off and on too much because the air temp fluctuated too much.
I spend a lot of time in hotels. It was always a mixed bag with these. If you got a good one it was almost an exception rather than the rule.
The first thing I do every time I step into a hotel room is check the filter. If it's dirty, then I bring it to the front desk to show them. I always get a free upgrade... to another room with an equally dirty filter. Which at that point I remove it and toss it in the stairwell to let it be maintenance's problem. I can't be bothered to put in more effort than that if the staff can't be bothered to replace their filters.
The curtain thing was a major pain in the ass; same with the noise. I've mostly been lucky with decent ones I guess, but I've spent a ton of time in shitty hotels.
I live in hotels more than half the time, here's the pro tip- take a hanger with clips from the closet and use it to clip the curtains above and behind the vents. Or just open the curtains, nobody cares what you're doing in there.
Had one of these at a hotel in Utah. It was hot as balls outside, but damn did this thing keep it frosty inside. And yeah, its loud, but at least it drowned out my dads snoring.
Road sounds are the worst. It completely surrounds you and there's no escaping it. And there's always those assholes with loud engines cranking their hogs.
I am in the Netherlands and lately AC's are getting more common. As someone with an appartement top floor flat roof, living room faced south the split AC installed this year is a blessing. Summers get hot nowadays.
especially when they turn on in the middle of the night.
That's a rookie move. Leave the fan on at full blast all night, and then you won't hear the difference when the AC kicks in, plus it's a free white-noise machine
I spent the last year on the road in a touring band and let me tell you, these things are not what they used to be. They've hobbled them with thermostat limits of as high as 70 F. I need that shit to go to at least 68.
I wish this were still the case. The last time I saw one of these was a year or so ago and I was excited to freeze. Unfortunately, the room AC was through a different, more modern, device. They just left the classic to toy with my emotions.
Same! Sometimes, I get let down because I see a thermostat on the wall but these bad asses can be controlled by those too. 55 degrees! Stay frosty my friends.
Ok, this is a personal thing for me. It might be just UK/Europe (I don't know) that rejects this use of the apostrophe in this case. Throughout my North American (US, specifically) education into collegiate level English courses I was taught to use an apostrophe to pluralize initialisms and acronyms specifically. If it is not an initialism or acronym, carry on with just adding an "s."
If there is an actual problem within this US variation of English that I have been taught, please let me know, because it's become frustrating to see things such as: "you don't need that apostrophe," and "this is a sin against the apostrophe" etc. etc.
I'm not trying to be critical or harsh here, just get a better understanding.
Thanks. That helps quite a bit. The internet's fury has made me question whether I am correct in this regard countless times, but I still have textbooks that say that the usage in this meme is correct. I've been curious for a long time.
I have tinnitus and having no white noise basically will make things louder than without any noise. This has given me the ability to fall asleep in virtually any conditions. I don’t know whether that’s a good thing or not.
Was in a 'modern' hotel recently. Hardwood floors, fresh paint, and warm embedded light fixtures.
Went to look for a thermostat. Nope. One of these AC/heater units. It was all analog, twisty knobs, faded labels, easily from the 1970s. Two options: regular, and high.
It was fine, but pretty obvious the remo budget had run out.