American Home Shield founded the home warranty industry in 1971 and services more than 2 million customers today. A home warranty from AHS gives you peace of mind. When your appliances - such as a dishwasher, clothes dryer, or systems - such as electrical, plumbing, or heating and cooling - malfunction, just give AHS a call. We'll send out a qualified and professional technician to evaluate and fix the issue. It's a no hassle way to keep your home appliances and systems running, saving you time and money.
AHS fundó la industria de garantía del hogar en 1971 y ofrece sus servicios a más de un millón de clientes hoy día. Una garantía del hogar de AHS le dará paz mental. Cuando sus sistemas electrodomésticos o sistemas domésticos como plomería o calefacción se descomponen solo llame a AHS. Nosotros les enviaremos un contratista professional y calificado para que evalúe y arregle el problema. Es una manera fácil de mantener sus sistemas domésticos y electrodomésticos funcionando.
Interesting. Ver never seen gutter covers before, mine are just open. My method is to climb onto the roof with my leaf blower and blow them clan... Not sure we're allowed to use the hose here in California
That air outlet needed some serious washing with a soapy solution, rinsed and dried. I would also search for a further problem if that much gunk is on the outlet. No judgment, just saying!
Literally the exact OPPOSITE of what one should do. Your video shows a person switching the airflow direction of the ceiling fan to the FALL/WINTER direction (UP). For the summer, you want the airflow DOWN.
Please let me correct the name of the gentleman who came out to service our garage door. His name is Jon Hann. Between voice recognition software and AutoCorrect, his name was not posted correctly on this comment. His business is American Door Masters. If you are in need of any kind of repair on your garage door or keypad entry, he is the man for the job. As I said before, he is a man of great integrity. He also arrives in a very timely fashion, gets right to the job and gets it done right and without delay. If you are in the upstate area, give him a call at 888-684-3667. Even if the repair is not covered by AHS, his prices are more than reasonable and he does a great job.
How am I suppose to clean the debris between the coils? Cleaning the surface is like wiping your butt on the surface but between the cracks is where the real damage is...
condenser (outside unit) and handler (inside) coils will always end up with debris. this guy is completely wrong with his suggestions. there are many kinds of coil cleaners. they all work, but some take more time and the harsher ones require more steps. in the case of deluting concentrate, start weak (normally acidic). any wash, oxidizer, or degreaser, etc is bad if you don't understand some things I'll explain, it'll be worse much sooner. u HAVE to call the manufacturer and ask the specs on what type of product to use. the usual thing is the pH. some companies (normally high end) have coatings that only need a water rinse and this video does not show that kind of unit! normally commercial equipment is in that genre. regardless (because it can't hurt) any cleaning should be rinsed by water if using an acid or alkaline cleaner. best method is to cut power, use foaming solution from outside, and rinse from inside (meaning unscrew that lid that holds the fan on the outside unit). the condenser coils expel heat by the fan pulling air from around and blowing up.. the handler fan pulling air from the filter to the coils. in other words, stuff gets sucked into the coils from the side u can see/ opposite side of the fan motor. u want to get dirt out by pushing it where it came from. a good technician will maintain a unit with solutions but knows that in a bad scenario, removing coils and blasting nitrogen is the best option. the foam method is best if as much grime as possible is already removed. Use a fun comb! this guy is not a knowledgeable source what so ever
a fin comb not only straightens the find but acts as a pick. Use lightly on dry coils, use pump sprayer with deluded foaming cleaner (verify pH type with manufacturer) which will push out grime with the bubbles, rinse with straight water... Use a slightly higher concentration, rinse again. then when everything is dry, use a plain old air compressor to blast out the bits of dirt stuck from when the water was drying. when servicing the handler coil, keep the system off (unless using nonfoaming agent) but go out and buy a $20 5gal bucket shop vac and hook it up to the condensation/drain line... some are gravity fed right outside typically with a 3/4in pvc or that 3/4in pvc runs to a pump with a tube that runs up over walls and outside. point is, during rinsing u will overflow the drip pan and have chemicals and water all over u