行业动态Score B (61)
I tried Temu's £10.67 portable air conditioner and five of its other cut-price cooling devices ...
3 小时前2 viewsSource: thisismoney.co.uk
Advertisement Fix your energy tariff NOW, households urged as bills could spike again on fresh Middle East conflict Do YOU know paying into a pension can cut your tax bill? Half of people are unaware of this simple way to avoid tax traps I tried Temu's £10.67 portable air conditioner and five of its other cut-price cooling devices. Here are my unexpected money-saving discoveries I'm a property expert: Here's why I'm still keen to invest in more buy-to-lets Fake football shirt crackdown sees 58,000 items seized at an Edinburgh address with a street value of £5.5m Self-employed and landlords could be forced to pay tax bills monthly as Labour and HMRC mull radical regime change Could solar panels make running air conditioning free? We crunch the numbers as more eye up air con Jaguar Land Rover prepares for huge electric car rollout by giving customers access to 1.1m devices across Europe US predator in plot to buy Aviva shares on the cheap: Warning that 100,000 small investors are targeted in 'scam' Borrowing costs reach highest level since May as oil climbs to $86 a barrel BP flags stronger oil trading as it continues to cash in on soaring prices South East Water to pay £30.5m penalty after Ofwat investigations find 'repeated' supply failures Watches of Switzerland's profits buoyed by demand from wealthy US shoppers as buyout talks emerge We must protect shareholders from 'mini-tenders' trying to get their shares on the cheap, says RUTH SUNDERLAND Watches of Switzerland shares hit a three-year high as it is targeted by foreign predators Summer blues for motorists as renewed conflict drives up cost of oil Would you buy government war bonds? Britons say they would fund defence... but prefer tax perks to patriotism How can we solve the 60% tax trap that's damaging Britain's economy? SIMON LAMBERT Two new student bank accounts launched - one offering £100 sign-up cash and another a shot at £100k prize We visit the London gold and silver showroom where you can buy AND sell your precious metals I made more than £1,000 of FREE money by booking everything from car insurance to holidays for my friends The years between 40 and 60 are a minefield for women in the workplace: RUTH SUNDERLAND Why can people without jobs only save tiny sums into pensions? STEVE WEBB replies I'm 6ft 7in and drive an electric Fiat 500, says magician PENN JILLETTE - I'm so frugal I steal power from the casino to charge it Previous Next I tried Temu's £10.67 portable air conditioner and five of its other cut-price cooling devices. Here are my unexpected money-saving discoveries - and the worthless tat to avoid By TOBY WALNE, CHIEF MONEY REPORTER Updated: 13:56 BST, 14 July 2026 e-mail --> (function (src, d, tag){ var s = d.createElement(tag), prev = d.getElementsByTagName(tag)[0]; s.src = src; prev.parentNode.insertBefore(s, prev); }("https://scripts.dailymail.com/static/gunther/1.17.0/async_bundle--.js", document, "script")); --> DM.loadCSS("https://scripts.dailymail.com/static/gunther/gunther-2159/video_bundle--.css"); --> As temperatures soar, sweltering homeowners are scrambling to get hold of air conditioning to stay cool. The number of installations in homes has tripled year on year. But with costs averaging £1,000 for just one room, for many they are still prohibitively expensive. Many households are therefore opting for portable air conditioners, which may not be as effective but are substantially cheaper – starting from around £200. However, most retailers and installers have waiting lists weeks long as they struggle to keep up with demand. But what if you could get air-conditioning for a fraction of the cost? Chinese online bargain shop Temu is advertising air-conditioning and other air-cooling devices for just a few pounds. They appear ready to ship so could arrive within days while the latest heatwave is still ongoing. Some claim to cool rooms, while others are handheld. The cut-price retailer has been winning over British shoppers since its launch just four years ago with its eclectic range of technology, homeware, toys and clothes. Around 13million UK shoppers use its app every month, making it the most popular shopping app second only to Amazon, according to analyst SimilarWeb. Toby Walne gives his verdict on a handful of air conditioning products from Chinese online bargain shop Temu But can you really purchase cooling gadgets from Temu for a fraction of the cost of those from other retailers and that do as good a job? Our hot and bothered reporter Toby Walne tried out their best-selling 'air conditioning units' so you don't have to – making some surprising money-saving discoveries to keep you feeling cool – and spotted the worthless tat to avoid... Pleasant waft rather than violent wind is Toby Walne's verdict on the Portable Air Conditioner - Temu's number one bestseller Portable Air Conditioner: £8.03 I have high hopes for Temu's Portable Air Conditioner, which boasts 'violent wind' and is advertised as the 'number one best seller'. The picture of it on Temu's website appears to show frost forming on it. As it costs just £8.03 and claims to be portable, I'm not holding out for a fully-fledged air conditioning unit to keep a whole room cool. But as Temu calls it an 'air conditioner and cooler' I'm hoping it'll at least be whizzier than a fan. It boasts five speeds and '720-degree adjustment'. What arrives is a small, blue plastic device under a foot long with an uncanny resemblance to an old-fashioned microphone. I turn it on and brace myself for being blasted across the room. Sadly, even at the highest setting it struggles to make even tissue paper flutter. It contains two plastic fans to provide an innocuous waft of air rather than what might be described as wind. But if you sit within a foot of it then a gentle breeze can be detected and the hum of the motor is not too loud. If you're looking for air-conditioning, this is clearly not it. However, if you want a small fan, then it does the job – and at a bargain price. It's not going to cool a whole room, but it would be ideal for use while sitting at a desk or a chair at home. I try it out while reading a book for a couple of hours at home, and it certainly takes the edge off the late-afternoon heat. On the downside – as with all the other gadgets – it was charged with a six-inch long USB cord. That means I can only position it near a plug or other device such as a laptop that it could charge from. It lasted 30 minutes between charges. Verdict: Pleasant waft rather than violent wind Ice cube images do not keep you cool. Toby was underwhelmed by the 'crazy ice-like air conditioning wind' Dyson Purple cooling air conditioner: £12.25 By amazing chance this gadget shares the same name as a well-known British manufacturer whose comparable handheld coolers sell for £100. The description promises that 'air dynamic supercharging, technology creates a crazy ice-like air conditioning wind'. If I can get a Dyson-like fan for this price, I'll be winning – even if it's not the real deal. But when the product arrives from China eight days later, there is no mention of Dyson on the packaging. Instead, it claims to be a 'handheld folding fan-ice cubes'. Not quite what I was hoping for, but 'fan-ice cubes' sounds promising in this heat. In reality, I receive a small, plastic hand-held fan that does not cool me down – but does waft air. It has a plastic handle with speed controls on with an encased fan on top that does bear some resemblance to the Dyson version that may have inspired it. Press the speed control and ice cube images and blue stripes along the handle light up. The buttons are fiddly, which means I struggle to turn off the one labelled '400 per cent refrigeration effect'. Verdict: Ice cube images do not keep you cool Leafless Portable Air Conditioner: £10.67 On the website listing, the product is called a 'silent small fan' With an uncanny physical resemblance to a £450 Dyson Cool Air Purifier – plus a 'humidification' button to squirt out a cooling jet of mist – this looks like the bargain of the century. It is designed for cooling down 'bedroom, room, office' and perhaps surprisingly a 'tent'. The online listing says the device is 'water and ice compatible'. Presumably this means it has a tank that you fill with cold water or ice that it blows air over to cool the room. However, I've still to find out. Unfortunately, 16 days after ordering this 'best seller' it still seems stuck on the slow boat from China with no signs of arrival. The hot weather spell may be over if it ever comes. Temu is cheap but delivery times can be unreliable. Verdict: Slow shipment from China means you miss the heatwave Neck-mounted Cooling Turbine: £9.91 This is a device designed to fit around the back of your neck – worn much in the same way you'd use a travel pillow, except this is made of plastic and has fans embedded in it. Flashing millstone round the neck that's more disco than draft, was Toby's verdict At £9.91, it's substantially cheaper than most of its rivals – Amazon has a similar-looking device for £14.99, John Lewis for £15, Currys for £29.99 – although I can't vouch for how the quality compares as I've not tried their versions. The website listing claims the device is 'perfect for lazy use' as it can 'blow cold wind to cool down' in five speeds. When it arrives, the contraption has a touch of Star Wars Stormtrooper bling about it – chunky white with copper plastic trim. But a near-fatal flaw is the tight squeeze it is to fit it even around my weedy pencil neck. There was a warm breeze to the jowls but an overwhelming hum from the motor made it near impossible to concentrate or hear anything – other than an irritating sound like a jet taking off. Two-inch wide flashing red, green, blue, purple lights bizarrely stick out at both ends of the necklace. They appear to be a warning to passersby that a hot-headed idiot is coming their way. Verdict: Flashing millstone round the neck Portable 'Air Conditioner': £13.83 The portable air conditioner is the size of a packet of cigarettes, says Toby As this is the most expensive device in my shopping basket, I'm hoping for something superior. The gadget is the first package to arrive - six days after ordering. Sadly, I receive only one portable (or as the packaging describes it, 'protable') air conditioner but after trying it out perhaps this is just as well. It is the size of a packet of cigarettes and even when I ramp up the dial to its maximum setting of '199 per cent' I can't feel anything when I affix it to the front or back of my trousers with it pointing upwards. The gadget's main selling point is 'freeing up the hands'. Since attaching it to my belt doesn't work, I use a string lanyard to wear it around my neck instead. This results in an uncomfortable tickle of air under my double chins. The gadget also has a second function as a torch, which when worn around my neck lights up my chin. This either gives continual light or you can hit a button to make the light flash to spell out SOS in morse code flashlight signals. Verdict: Best for rescue from sinking ships This product is great as a call for help on a sinking ship - more SOS than sea breeze Turbo fan: £5.38 This 'best seller' costs little more than a paper folding fan (that costs £4 through an online shop such as Amazon). The 'Turbo' is a 'three-in-one' that can be used to create a breeze for your body, be folded on a floor to cool overheated feet or – using a lanyard – to waft the face. It has five speeds and lasts up to ten hours between charges made via a USB computer port. The Turbo fan is the cheapest on this list. It lasts up to ten hours and has five speeds It's an uninspiring dull grey device, but at least dispenses with gaudy gimmicks and pointless flashing lights favoured by the other gadgets in my haul. The fan pushes out a gentle, if slightly noisy, breeze. If you're really determined to join the current craze of using cheap, plastic gadgets to create a breeze, this is not a bad option. But for those preferring to cool down in traditional British stoical silence, a far more practical solution is to waft your face with a sun hat or dance the Spanish flamenco with a traditional folding fan. Verdict: Don't bother – and opt for a paper fan So are they worth it? Perhaps I was naïve to think I could get anything resembling air conditioning for such a low price – even if products I ordered were described as such. After all, air conditioning is much more than a just a fan. It is where warm air from a room is drawn into a unit, passed over cold coils filled with refrigerant so the heat is absorbed. Air conditioners are typically wall mounted with an indoor unit attached to an outside one. Portable versions tend to sit on the floor – they're typically a couple of feet or so high – and have a pipe attached that must be directed out of a window or door so that the extracted heat can be released into the outside air. The Temu gadgets I bought are nothing like this – they are really just versions of a fan, where the air is circulated to create a cooling current of air. However, if you're looking for a fan, Temu's Portable Air Conditioner in particular is not a bad version – and at £8.03 I think it's a pretty good deal. Share or comment on this article: I tried Temu's £10.67 portable air conditioner and five of its other cut-price cooling devices. Here are my unexpected money-saving discoveries - and the worthless tat to avoid e-mail More top stories Toggle Search POPULAR MONEY SECTIONS Take me to… Best savings rates tables Find the best mortgage calculator Power Portfolio investment tracker Stock market data and share prices This is Money's podcast This is Money's newsletter The best DIY investing platforms The best bank accounts The best cash Isas The best credit cards Save on energy bills Compare broadband and TV deals How to find cheaper car insurance Investing Show videos Financial calculators Search Enter search term Search Search within All articles Share prices DON'T MISS Electric cars can be GPS-tracked for Rachel Reeves' eVED tax sting - and 3p-a-mile rates will rise with inflation despite 15-year fuel duty freeze Five ways cost-conscious homeowners can save on solar panels Ad Feature How I made £1,000 of FREE money booking everything from holidays to car insurance for my friends Britons would buy government war bonds... if they came with tax perks Why can people with no wages only save tiny sums into pensions? STEVE WEBB replies We visit the London gold and silver showroom where you can buy AND sell your precious metals Sponsored EXCLUSIVE Teslas among least reliable used electric cars but batteries aren't the biggest problem for ageing EVs Magician Penn Jillette: I'm 6ft 7in and drive an electric Fiat 500 - I'm so frugal I steal power from the casino to charge it Mansion tax could become more like a terrace tax in London, warns estate agency boss Andy Burnham's fiscal timebomb is revealed by the OBR, warns HAMISH MCRAE My naughty money secret has made me £9,000 so far this year For women in the workplace, the years between 40 and 60 are a minefield: RUTH SUNDERLAND Fuel prices are starting to rise again: Here's where petrol and diesel are cheapest Mortgage rates see biggest monthly fall since 2024 but brokers fret over Middle East impact How can we solve the 60% tax trap damaging Britain's economy? SIMON LAMBERT The one metal powering a global shares boom and making investors huge gains... and it's not gold Boost Universal Credit for 66-year-olds suffering hardship as state pension age rises to 67, urge MPs MOST READ MONEY Think you can't make money flipping houses any more? Meet the couple on course to net £40k from their latest doer-upper Battle for Easyjet turns nasty as US private equity rivals trade barbs over their bids for the airline EXCLUSIVE I'm selling my unique 'marmite' West Sussex house for £5m - do you love it or hate it? Can David Hockney prints make you a mint? As artist's death sparks revival of his work, here's what investors need to know Seven in ten landlords still say no to pets despite new rules - here's where it's hardest to find a pet-friendly home Is a mansion tax for properties 'worth' £1.5m or more fair? This is Money podcast Gearing up for the future with a hint of nostalgia: RAY MASSEY bids farewell after 31 years as Daily Mail motoring editor Millions of drivers lose initial 'Dieselgate 2' High Court battle: Judge rules carmakers broadly did not use emissions-cheating devices The TEN big pension blunders to avoid revealed, plus our unmissable tips on how to fix them Number of new-build homes coming to market slumps to lowest since 2017 in blow to Labour's 1.5million target Is the eighties MG Metro Turbo making a comeback? Electric hot hatch rival to the Renault 5 confirmed for 2027 Metro Bank offers 100% mortgage to first-time buyers - but they will need their parents' help I was knocked off my motorbike last year: Why am I still waiting for £10,000 insurance payout? CRANE ON THE CASE More middle-class families could be clobbered by nasty 'Mansion Tax' warns LEE BOYCE - is a £93,750 stamp duty bill not enough? Would an Easyjet takeover lead to a hike in the cost of flights? What you need to know about US buy-out The Chinese rival to the Porsche 911: Denza Z is an £150,000 electric supercar with ridiculous power EXCLUSIVE Sole traders hold off on HMRC's Making Tax Digital scheme as fewer than half have registered ahead of August deadline Britain is failing on financial education: I'm 15 and my generation isn't being set up to succeed The Temu Defender: Denza Bao 5 is a £70,000 hybrid SUV with 16 driving modes that looks like a Land Rover Rich families are gifting more generously and earlier in life to avoid inheritance tax on pensions Oasis, Dua Lipa and Coldplay lead Britain's £11bnrock 'n' roll boom Why I never say 'hello' first when I answer the phone: RACHEL RICKARD STRAUS on a terrifying new AI scam Car hire firm charged me £156 for leaving animal hair on seats... but I don't have a pet! SALLY SORTS IT My neighbour put up a new fence but says I can't paint my side. Can he stop me? Consumer lawyer DEAN DUNHAM KC replies Why twice as many households could be forced to pay a new mansion tax under Andy Burnham's latest plans... EDF sending neck fans and cooling towels in 'heatwave relief packs' to help vulnerable customers Why my heart sinks every time I order something and find out that the courier is Evri: DOMINIC LAWSON Bigger new cars causing a 'parking crisis' with residents squeezed out of their own streets How I made more than £3,000 of FREE money in 6 months - without spending a penny of my own cash. Anyone can do it in just 15 minutes a day Student loans were 'mis-sold' by Government, damning official report claims: Everything you need to know... Revealed: The councils charging residents most to take away garden rubbish Dacia Striker is a sub-£25,000 family car: Crossover is a jacked-up estate - can it win over UK drivers? Half of pet owners have a savings account for their furry friend with £1,000 stashed away I'm a bilateral leg amputee and was out of work and on benefits for 20 years - this is how I finally got a job and why you should NEVER give up Couple trade in their beloved 60-year-old classic Volvo for a new electric one How to secure regular income from your savings: Our guide to cashing in with investment trusts - and the best options for your money Britain's worst speeders revealed after 30,000 were caught excessively over 20mph limits last year Bank of England sounds alarm over AI as fears of stock market bubble and cyber attack mount Capita apologises for civil service pensions meltdown as government condemns 'dreadful' failures Nationwide cuts mortgage rates as price war ramps up between lenders Home Top Share
Read the full original article:
thisismoney.co.uk#Temu
