Condensate Drain Line Rear 1800 / Houdini #1606

(23 Reviews)
SKU: 1606 Condensate Drain REAR
$85.00
In Stock

Typical Processing Time: 2-3 Business Days

Shipping Information:

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Overview

A condensate drain line is strongly recommended for wine cellar installations of 1800 and Houdini Series wine cooling units.

Details

Condensate Drain Line Rear 1800 / Houdini (P/N 1606). Recommended when the wine cooling unit will be installed in a wine cellar, 1/2-inch ID condensate fitting and 8-foot clear vinyl tube allows overflow condensation to exit from the rear of the cooling unit.

This option is designed to be factory-installed.

Features

  • 1/2-inch ID condensate fitting
  • 8-foot drain line

Configurations

If you already have purchased a CellarPro 1800 Series cooling unit, do not order this item; instead, you should order our Condensate Drain Line Retrofit Kit.

Specs & Resources

Brand: CellarPro

Size: 10 feet (drain line)

Warranty:
1 Year

Diagram for 1800 condensate trap
Diagram for 1800H condensate trap

Ratings & Reviews

23 reviews

Necessary Attachment!

by -

I needed to drain my system into my AC drain lines, this worked perfectly. Keeps water away from electrics!

New Chiller for small cellar

by

Purchased with a new 1800QT-EXC. Installed in a new cellar, simple to install the hose to the back of the unit. Hose could be a little longer in my opinion, I had to go to a big box store to get additional length to hit the floor drain.

Condensate Drain Line 1800 rear # 1606

by

The price of $75.00 for the rear drain plug and hose seems a bit high for what it actually is. But, I did not want to retro fit or have draining issues. To me is seems that i should be opt out, and always included.

Condensate Drain Line 1800 rear # 1606

by

The price of $75.00 for the rear drain plug and hose seems a bit high for what it actually is. But, I did not want to retro fit or have draining issues. To me is seems that i should be opt out, and always included.

Definitely needed

by

I don't think this should be optional, there will always be some condensate coming out of the unit I believe, and it needs to go somewhere. I connected this to a cleanout with a handy reducer, put a P-trap shape in the line so odors don't move the wrong way, and voila, works like a charm.