Turns Wasted Air Into Electricity
The expelled airflow from your AC fan spins an internal generation mechanism inside ACES, producing direct current that gets converted and fed right back into the system.
ACES mounts on your outdoor condenser unit and converts the fan's expelled airflow into electricity—feeding it right back into your AC system to cut your energy bills and reduce system strain.
Any property with a central air conditioner can benefit from ACES—residential, commercial, or industrial. If your AC runs, ACES works.
A fully engineered, patent-pending retrofit device that reclaims wasted AC energy and puts it back to work. Prototype available.
Watch inventor Lee Crews explain how ACES captures your AC unit's wasted airflow and converts it into electricity to power the system itself.
Every time your air conditioner runs, its outdoor fan blasts a powerful column of hot air straight up into the sky—and every bit of energy in that moving air is simply lost. HVAC systems are one of the largest energy consumers in any home or business, and the inefficiency built into every cooling cycle quietly drives up bills month after month. Most homeowners never think about it. Lee Crews did.
ACES mounts directly onto the upper portion of your existing outdoor AC condenser unit. As the fan runs, expelled airflow passes through the ACES housing, spinning an internal generation mechanism that produces direct current. That current travels through a supply cable to an inverter, converts to alternating current, and feeds back to the AC unit's controller—supplying auxiliary power and reducing what the system draws from the grid. A second design option attaches the generator directly to the fan motor shaft for a fully integrated solution. Contact us today for manufacturing, retail, wholesale, distribution, or licensing opportunities.
The expelled airflow from your AC fan spins an internal generation mechanism inside ACES, producing direct current that gets converted and fed right back into the system.
ACES mounts on existing outdoor condenser units as a retrofit add-on, or can be integrated directly with the fan motor shaft for a built-in solution.
By feeding reclaimed energy back into the AC system, ACES reduces the electricity drawn from the grid—lowering bills and reducing system wear over time.
Take a closer look at the retrofit device that turns your AC's wasted energy into electricity.
Inventor Lee Crews of Shreveport, LA has developed a smart energy reclamation device that puts the wasted airflow from your air conditioner to work – generating electricity right where you need it most.
As an electrician, Lee understood something most homeowners never think about: every time an air conditioner runs, its fan blasts a powerful column of hot air straight up into the sky – and all the energy in that moving air is simply lost. Lee knew there had to be a better way. After years of thinking about the problem, he envisioned a device that could sit right on top of the condenser unit, intercept that airflow, and turn it into electricity to help run the very system creating it. The result is ACES: Air Conditioner Electric Saver – and it's ready for market!
But how does it work? ACES mounts directly onto the upper portion of an existing outdoor AC condenser unit. As the fan runs, the expelled forced airflow passes through the ACES housing, spinning an internal electrical generation mechanism that produces a direct current. That current travels through a supply cable to an inverter, which converts it to alternating current and feeds it back to the AC unit's controller – supplying the system with auxiliary power and reducing the electricity it draws from the grid. A second design option attaches the generator directly to the fan motor shaft for an even more integrated solution. Either way, ACES turns energy you're already spending into energy you get back!