Certified Comfort Heating and Cooling - Louisville KY

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Archive for Maintenance

Why Air Flow is Critical to HVAC Life

Sunday, July 3rd, 2011

One of the many things we check on our service calls is system air flow. Air flow is critical to a long lasting air conditioner and furnace. Why? Let me explain.

I’ll first cover the heating side, your gas furnace. Inside your furnace is a heat exchanger. The flame shoots inside the heat exchanger and the fan blows air across the outside. If the air flow is insufficient, the heat exchanger becomes too hot. This excess heat stresses the metal. Over time, this stress leads to cracks in the heat exchanger. That is a fire and carbon monoxide hazard. By law, we are required to disable and tag a furnace with a cracked heat exchanger until the furnace is repaired or replaced.

What about the cooling side? Above your furnace is an air conditioning coil. Refrigerant (you may call it freon) flows inside the coil. The furnace fan blows air across the coil to cool the air and your home. When the air is cooled, heat is being transferred to the refrigerant. We need enough heat added to the refrigerant to boil all of it because the compressor in the air conditioner is designed to only pump gas (completely boiled refrigerant). If there is any liquid, compressor damage will occur.

In summary, proper air flow is important to both the heating and cooling sides of your HVAC system. There’s nothing more important during the design and installation of your system. Proper air flow ensures a long lasting system.

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Cracked furnace heat exchangers

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Annual heating and furnace tuneups are key to maintaining  your system in peak operation conditions. They also find potential safety issues. We conducted a furnace tuneup this morning for a new maintenance agreement customer and found crimp rings failed on the Goodman heat exchanger.

Furnace Heat Exchanger with Crimp Rings

We first noticed flames rolling backwards from the center burner. After shutdown, we pulled the blower assembly and found crimp rings laying atop the assembly.

The crimp rings are inserted into the eyelets and used to hold the heat exchanger together. You can see the eyelets in the heat exchanger in this picture. When the crimp rings fail, you typically see cracks surrounding the eyelets. You can see the cracks on either side of the upper ring here.

These cracks are caused by expansion and contraction of the metal over the years of operation. These failures are accelerated by lack of maintenance and improper airflow.

Heat exchangers with cracks should never by operated. They are a fire and carbon monoxide danger. Simple stated, cracks don’t get smaller. They only grow in size.

If your system has been diagnosed with a heat exchanger failure or crack, give us a call or contact us today. We’ll be more than happy to provide you with a proposal for a new furnace or replacement heat exchanger.

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Categories : Heating, Maintenance

Dry Winter Air in Home

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

When repairing or installing new furnaces, I’m often asked about dry air in the winter. Many people associate dry air with running the furnace or heat pump. Neither type of heating system removes moisture from the air. The air is simply heated as it passes through the equipment. There is no change in moisture content.

The dry air in the home is caused by infiltration (Wiki Definition) of outside winter air. During the winter months, there are typically two causes of infiltration: prevailing wind and stack effect. Winter months are typically accompanied by a prevailing wind that pushes cold dry air into the cracks of your home. Stack effect (hot air rising) also causes dry cold air to be drawn into the lower areas of your home. Older homes or poorly constructed new homes are more susceptible to both phenomena.

What can you do to prevent this infiltration? Seal your home. There are many different places that your home can be sealed. Energy Star website has a great DIY article on sealing home leaks.

If you have taken the steps to seal your home and it is still too dry, you can add a humidifier. For years, I emptied, cleaned, and filled our portable humidifiers. Bleh. What pain! We installed a steam humidifier by Honeywell last winter. So nice. Our humidity is comfortable in the home twenty-four hours a day with no hassle of the portable humidifier. I installed several for customers last winter, and all are quite pleased with the comfort provided.

If you’d like further information, please give us a call at 244-4328 or use our Contact page.

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HVAC System Upgrades and Incentives

Friday, September 10th, 2010

As the summer comes to an end, Louisville cooling systems aren’t running quite as much.  It has been a record summer with 73 days above average. Our city had the most deviation above average than any other city in the US.  Fall is on the way with cooler temperatures. With the change of seasons, comes incentives from manufacturers to replace your existing furnace and air conditioner.

York is offering a free 10-year parts and labor warranty with the purchase of a new heating and cooling system. That’s 10-years of worry-free operation. What’s the catch? No catch. You simply have to maintain your HVAC system in proper operating condition.

Certified Comfort provides maintenance services through our service agreement program. These agreements include two system health checks each year (one cooling / one heating). Additionally, we can add filter replacements and humidifier pad changes to your agreement. If you don’t have a York extended warranty, our maintenance customers receive a 10% discount on all repairs.

Why should you have a maintenance agreement? Many major failures can be prevented my simple maintenance or replacement of worn minor components before failure. You can read more here on our site.

Give us a call today at 244-4328 or use our contact form to schedule an appointment or request further information.

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Endless Summer

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

The air conditioning repair season has been full tilt since the middle of May. The heat doesn’t seem to want to leave any time soon either. Louisville weather forecast shows low to mid 90s for the next ten days.  However, school is back in session in many Kentucky districts. That means cooler air isn’t too far. Yet, the last thing on your mind is your furnace or heat pump.

We’ll start scheduling fall furnace heating tuneups after Labor Day in just a few weeks. What should you expect for a heating tuneup?

Meh. We’ll cover that later. It’s just too darn hot to think about a heating season tuneup right now. Enjoy the rest of  your summer and be sure to call us if you need air conditioning service.

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HVAC Filters

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Air conditioning systems in Louisville are under a tremendous strain this year. One big thing you can do to help is using the right filter and changing the furnace air filter.

Do you have trouble remembering to change your HVAC filter? Are you asking yourself what is a filter? Here’s a short video with some helpful tips to remember to change your filter.

As always, please feel free to ask any questions in the comment sections. If you need service or a new system, give us a call at 244-4328 or use our contact form.

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Why’s My Coil Freezing?

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Well, it’s been hot lately in Louisville. Real hot.  Certified Comfort has been running full speed six days per week.  My running and training schedule has been put on hold. Good chance your air conditioner has been running hard, too.

Some of you have experienced a frozen coil. The big line between the indoor and outdoor units is covered with ice. If you removed the coil panel, you would see a big blog of ice there as well. Next step is a big puddle of water under the furnace when you stop the unit from running.

So, what causes a frozen coil? Two things primarily cause it: low load and low refrigerant (R-22, R-410a, Freon, Puron, etc.) charge.

Low load. What is that? Well, it’s usually an extremely dirty super high efficient allergy preventing cat hair catching filter that was just changed six months ago. Yep. My favorite. 3M filters. Paul Harvey and Rush promote some nice near-cardboard dense filters, too.

Seriously, I’m not a fan of the high dollar 1″ thick filters. Very few duct systems are designed to handle the pressure drop of the filter. This high pressure drop causes low air flow across the indoor coil. In turn, this makes for a very cold coil. When then filter loads and gets plugged, the airflow can be reduced to a point that the coil temperature is less than 32°F. With a coil that cold, the moisture in the air freezes on the coil surface. If the system runs long enough, you will have a block of ice.

Side note: unless you have an EAC or 5″ media filter, you really only need the cheapo blue filters. Change them monthly when you get your LG&E utility bill. Buy them by the case at your favorite big box store.

The other cause: low refrigerant charge. Now, you may be thinking “Rob when the refrigerant charge is low, the house gets hot. How can this possibly freeze the coil?” Well, here’s the answer.

Low refrigerant charge reduces the pressures of the indoor coil. The lower pressure corresponds to a lower temperature of the refrigerant as it enters the coil. The freezing process starts there. As the system runs and runs and runs, the ice builds and builds. It does take some time to build this ice block.

So, what causes a low charge? Two choices again: a leak or improper charge. Refrigerant should never need to be added to a system unless it wasn’t charged properly at installation.  All systems come charged from the factory with enough refrigerant for a 15′ lineset (the copper pipes between the units). The installing contractor has to add a certain amount of refrigerant for each foot of copper. If not, you’ll get a frozen coil when the unit runs long and hard in the first heat wave.

Well, I hope that you now understand a little better about the causes of a frozen evaporator (indoor) coil. If you have any questions, feel free to ask. Love to help you with questions even if I’m not working for you at this time.

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Spring HVAC Maintenance

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Over the years, I have been asked, “Is it really necessary to have semiannual HVAC maintenance? It cools. So, it must be working correctly!”  Well, folks, does your car run with dirty oil that hasn’t been changed in 20,000 miles? Sure it will run.  However, you are shortening the life of your engine and it’s operating inefficiently.

The same is true for your air conditioning system. Every year that your system operates causes degradation of certain wear components – contactors and capacitors. These components should be monitored and replaced as they fall from outside tolerance specifications.  A pitted contactor causes undue stress on the compressor. If pitted enough, there will be a serious voltage drop causing high energy consumption and eventual early life failure.  The same is true for capacitors. These little “batteries” allow the motors to run efficiently. Once outside their normal values, the motors are inefficient, draw more power, and ultimately fail.

A cooling season tuneup also includes a good outside coil washing and system monitoring.  A biodegradable coil cleanser will loosen the dirt and debris and allow the technician to flush the coil with water.  Spraying from the outside in is not recommended as it further impacts the debris.

The bottom line: maintenance is important and should be done every cooling season to insure optimum performance and a longer life for your air conditioning system. You can click here for more reasons to have your heating and cooling systems maintained.

On my next post, I’ll cover “adding some freon to get it going.”

Have a great Derby Weekend, Louisville!

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