You’ve got a 2,000-square-foot warehouse floor running hot from machinery and people, and the air handlers just can’t keep up—this unit pulls in outdoor air through a saturated cellulose pad, drops the dry-bulb temperature by about 12–15°C, and pushes it across the space with that axial fan. It’s not going to handle humidity spikes above 60% RH very well, but for dry climates or summer afternoons when the dew point sits below 18°C, it’s a solid workhorse. We’ve seen these installed in metal fabrication shops and assembly lines where the alternative was ducted AC at triple the capital cost.

The 18,000 cmh airflow covers 80 to 150 square meters, but that’s at maximum fan speed with the 30-liter tank filled—at 15–20 L/H water consumption, you’re refilling roughly every 1.5 to 2 hours in peak heat. Most buyers actually go with a direct water line hookup instead of relying on the tank alone, especially for continuous shifts. The 16-speed Triac fan control is smoother than a basic stepped switch, so you can dial it down for overnight cooling without that on-off jerkiness.

It weighs 78 kg net, so you’ll need two people and a dolly to get it through a standard door, but the cabinet is made form virgin plastic that doesn’t get brittle after a few seasons in the sun. We usually have stock, but confirm lead time if you’re ordering less than a full pallet—the carton packaging is fine for truck freight, but for LCL ocean shipping you might want to request plywood crating at cost. The CE and CB certifications are current, and our company provide a COA with each batch that includes the pad thickness and airflow calibration data.
One detail a buyer might not think to ask: the LCD panel shows both water level and fan speed, but the remote control uses IR, not RF, so you need line of sight to the front panel—if the unit is mounted high on a wall, the remote range drops to about 5 meters. The axial fan itself is noisier than a centrifugal design at full speed (76 dBA is pretty much a conversation-level hum), but for factory use that’s usually acceptable. Anyway, the 1pH, 220V/50Hz power requirement is standerd for most industrial outlets in China and Europe, but check your local voltage drop if you’re running long cable runs.

For a buyer’s custoemr running a small workshop or a storage facility with 4-meter ceilings, this unit outperforms portable swamp coolers that only cover 40 square meters—the ducting option lets you split airflow to 3 or 4 rooms using 15–20 meter runs, which is better than most window-mounted units in this class. cooling effect is basically direct evaporative, so it’s not suited for sealed cleanrooms or pharmaceutical storage where humidity control is critical. We’ve had a few clients use it in greenhouse cooling, but they had to add a pre-filter for pollen.

The 1160 x 1160 x 940 mm footprint means you need a window frame or a wall cutout at least that size, and the weight requires structural support—don’t mount it on drywall alone. The Triac fan control and the 30L tank capacity together give you about 90 minutes of operation without a refill at the highest water setting, which is a practical trade-off for a unit that costs roughly 10–15% less than comparable brands with the same airflow.
MOQ is typically 1 unit for sample orders, but for bulk wholesale we usually ask for at least 50 units per model. We can adjust based on your needs.
Yes, we include all three certifications—CE, CCC, and CB—with every order. You'll get digital copies before shipping, and physical copies in the carton if needed.
For 100 units, expect 15-20 working days after order confirmation and deposit. We keep some stock for faster delivery on smaller orders.
Exactly. At max fan speed, you'll get about 1.5-2 hours of runtime on a full tank. For continuous use, we recommend hooking it up to a water line—there's an inlet for that.
It ships in a strong carton with foam padding inside, suitable for sea freight. For extra protection, we can add a wooden crate at cost—just let us know.