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Air Conditioning History Lesson – Short and Sweet HVAC History Brief

Not Quiet Commercial Air Conditioning HistoryAir Conditioning History Does Not Begin on July 7, 1902

Although Willis Haviland Carrier ranks high in air conditioning history, tinkering with ways to create a cooler living environment has long intrigued inventors in all nations. Carrier’s invention may have initiated modern day concepts of how HVAC cooling systems should function, but the history of chemical/mechanical air conditioning starts much earlier in time. The following presentation illustrates some of the historical highlights of man-evoked cooling processes.

 

1758 Benjamin Franklin working with John Hadley discovered that evaporating liquids such as alcohol and similar unstable fluids drops the temperature of an object sufficiently to freeze water. Note: In 1820, an English inventor named Michael Faraday while compressing and liquefying ammonia repeated the discovery.

1830s Working with the principle of compression, Dr. John Gorrie constructed an ice-making machine. For transferring cool air, he used blowers to push air across buckets of ice. It was 1851 before he patented the idea, but a lack of financial backing prevented him from achieving his dream of using the system as a means of cooling enclosed environments.

1881 Air conditioning history includes some unique moments in parallel political history. In 1881 President James Garfield was fatally wounded by the shot of an assassin. In a desperate effort to preserve the President’s life, naval engineers constructed an air conditioning device wherein a box of ice covered with a water-soaked cloth served as the key component. By using a fan to blow hot air overhead, the cooler air coming from the peculiarly designed “air conditioning” system actually lowered room temperature by as much as 20-degrees Fahrenheit. Although the device consumed, within a two-month period, over ½ million pounds of ice, the wounded President still passed away.

1902 Enter Willis Haviland Carrier with a device he called the Apparatus for Treating Air. In the nature now applied in modern HVAC technology, the Carrier system functioned by pushing existing air across cold coils. The first Carrier air conditioning system was designed for and installed in the Brooklyn-based Sackett-Wilhelms Lithographing and Publishing Company. Assuring ink alignment and preventing paper from wrinkling during the printing process was the primary function of that first Carrier system. The success of the unit prompted Willis Carrier to establish the now popular and well-established Carrier Air Conditioning Company of America.

Additional 1902 successes include a 300-ton comfort cooling system installed in the core structure of the New York Stock Exchange. Designed by Alfred Wolff and fully functional for twenty years, the system used cooling properties provided by waste-system-operated refrigeration. During the same time period, a zone control air conditioning system of thermostats, dampers and ductwork was installed in the Kansas City, Missouri Armour office building.

1906 An office building in Buffalo became the first structure specifically designed to use and incorporate air conditioning technology office-wide. To reduce the possibility of fire, the designers incorporated carbon dioxide as the refrigerant – Ops. Additional breakthroughs in 1906 came when Stuart Cramer of North Carolina developed a ventilating system for use in NC textile plants. By adding water vapor to the air, the unit increased interior humidity and helped reduce the tendency of yard to break during the spinning process. Named by the inventor himself, the Cramer humidifying process was officially called “Air Conditioning.”Air Conditioning History Restaurant Bragging Rights

1907 HVAC cooling equipment first entered the hotel industry when Frederick Wittenmeier from Kroeschell Brothers Ice Machine Company installed air conditioning systems of his own design in the Chicago meeting rooms of the Congress Hotel.

1914 HVAC cooling equipment entered the residential market when a 7*6*20 feet A/C system, although never put to active use, was installed in the Charles Gates Minneapolis mansion.

1923 Using alcohol-based antifreeze as the core component, Nizer and then Frigidaire marketed an electrically chilled ice cream dripping cupboard. Ice cream cans were stored in wells within a cupboard that was surrounded by the refrigerated core component.

1930 Frederick Wittenmeier’s ice machine company continued to install hotel and movie cooling systems with figures that reached into the hundreds since the 1907 initial startup at the Chicago Congress Hotel.

1931 The first “not-poor-man-friendly” individual room air conditioning units entered the home and office marketplace on a price tag ranging from 10 to 50 thousand dollars per unit. Invented and developed by J.Q. Sherman and H.H. Schultz, the costly units reflected a modern day equivalent price tag in the range of $120,000 to $600,000 per system.

1939 Air conditioning entered the automotive world. The first systems, invented by Packard, lacked dashboard controls and required manual disconnect of the associated engine compressor belt to prevent functional cooling, but the extra work did not prevent buyers from enjoying a cool and comfortable mobile experience.

1947 Henry Galson established a production line for manufacturing window air conditioning systems at a price affordable to the mass market. In the first year of production, 43 thousand U.S. residents enjoyed cost-efficient home cooling without being forced to upgrade their complete HVAC system. By the 1950s, residential air conditioning had become as commonplace as moon pie and RC Cola.

1969 Automotive A/C with panel controls passed the 54-percent mark for installation in all new vehicles.

1970s Central heating and cooling began to replace window units.

1987 Government management of energy consumption resulted in the National Appliance Energy Conservation Act, which established standard energy efficiency requirements for central air conditioning systems, freezers, window A/C units and refrigerators.

1994 To save wordage, this air conditioning history brief has skipped various important HVAC moments in time. But we must mention at least one of the points linked to global warming and climate change, after which we will leap ahead into the 2000s. It was 1994 when the link between ozone depletion and Freon forced worldwide response to man-triggered changes in climate. As the international agreement of the Montreal Protocol pushed for a phasing out of CFC refrigerants, automobile industries were required to switch from Freon to R134a, and the world began to awaken to the threats associated with global warming.

2007 Trane introduced the AlumaTuff™ coil all-aluminum outdoor coil framework founded on the technology already associated with the patented Trane all-aluminum Spine Fin™ condenser coil framework. At the same time, American Standard introduced the all-aluminum DuraCoil™ evaporator coil as a component of it’s matched systems program.

2008 Ingersoll Rand acquired Trane reshaped the Ingersoll Rand global market solutions for comfort in buildings and homes.

2010 The Trane ComfortLink™ II Control system received the Popular Mechanics Breakthrough Award for effective performance, design, creativity and engineering that leads the way into the future.

2011 The EPA identifies the Rheem Prestige Series A/C equipment among the ENERGY STAR most efficient air conditioning products.

2012 American women voted Trane indoor comfort system air conditioning and heating equipment as the best on the market. Also in 2012, Daikin Industries, Ltd. initiated a major move in the residential HVAC U.S. market place by acquiring Goodman Global Group, Inc. for a price of $3.7 billion.

2014 HVAC technology continues to introduce systems with better energy efficiency, performance per dollar of cost, and extended durability. Let’s see how the year plays into the story of air conditioning history.

 

American Cooling and Heating offers Arizona homes and businesses quality installation on the best systems available from Goodman, Trane, Rheem, Carrier any other top HVAC companies. For more information on how to get the best pricing on your new Arizona air conditioning installation, click here.

 

Disclaimer: The information in this article accumulates from various reliable sources. However, American Cooling and Heating renounces any and all legal responsibility to any person in respect of anything or the consequences of anything done or omitted to be done in reliance upon the whole or any part of this article and its content. All trademarks, logos, and associated content displayed are the property of their respective owners. 

Resources:

       http://www.greatachievements.org/?id=3854

       http://www.trane.com/Corporate/About/history.asp

       http://www.daikin.com/press/2012/120829_2

 

 

Global Warming and Human Settlements in Urban Areas – An ACH Review of the 2014 WGII AR5 Final Draft

Global Warming Plot Of NASA GISS DataArizona HVAC Service Center, American Cooling and Heating, Presents a Review of the Risks, Vulnerabilities and Impact of Climate Change on People Who Live In An Urban Community

“To simplify the WGII AR5 final draft summary on global warming, think three categories of impact: 1) Resources, 2) Human Settlement and 3) Human Health. In this release of the American Cooling and Heating global warming series, we focus is on how climate change affects human settlements in urban environments,” ACH Phoenix data team.

For urban residents, global warming presents increasing risk factors associated with accumulated regional vulnerabilities and the economic conditions linked to those vulnerabilities. This release of the American Cooling and Heating global warming update highlights some of the problems, some of the possible solutions and some of the current effects that climate change has imposed and will continue to impose upon people who live in urban environments. For sake of a condensed presentation, all urban regions are grouped as one with no included adjustments for site size, characteristics or financially viable conditions

Preliminary Disclosure: The contents of the Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability report include the complete scientific and procedural evaluation of global warming data. Delivered in March of 2014 by the Working Group II global warming task force, the 2013 WGII AR5 IPCC Fifth Assessment Report is not yet approved in detail (1). However, the 38th Session of the IPCC has accepted the report along with the general statements of how global warming affects:

** Natural and managed world systems and world resources
** Matters of human health and human security
** AND Human settlements, including the industries and infrastructures within those settlements.

Urban Climate Adaptation Versus Urban Climate Change and the Associated Risks

Better than half of the world’s population resides, builds and works within urban communities (2). Global greenhouse gas emissions are an undesirable by-product of such tight-knit regions. Rapid growth in urban cities, especially in the low-to-middle income countries, generates an increase in vulnerable human settlements at risk of extreme weather change.

The situation can be somewhat controlled by effective governmental management of infrastructure, managed land-use and development of a strong ecosystem, but the risks factors continue to grow. Building reliable resilience while also enabling sustainable urban development demands leveraged support of climate change adaptation. A support that does not always deliver a resource-efficient solution to the growing problem of global warming and the associated climate changes hinders the resilience of the project.

The internal composition of most cities revolves around an inter-dependent system than can be managed but that can also be limited by medium confidence in limited submitted evidence. But when the evidence mounts and the management system delivers assurance of co-benefits, a powerful rise in support follows. The urban community suddenly realizes a resource-efficient method for addressing global warming and the associated climate changes.

As the risks associated with global warming increase, the negative impacts on human settlements, human health and local economies accumulate. Sea levels rise. Storms surge. Flooding, landslides and water scarcity are commonplace. Air pollution, drought and heat stress drive up the costs of air filtration, water supplies and even home air conditioning. Excessive energy consumption becomes the norm. According to the 2014 WGII AR5 Final Draft, by the year 2100 the cost of air conditioning will increase energy demands by up to 30-fold (2).

Changes in the climate impact almost every range of urban infrastructure, including sanitation and drainage, energy and water resources, transportation, and communication. Is the services arena, urban dwellers can expect a rise in risk factors associated with emergency services and personal health care response times. From economic stress factors to household well-being, the methods or managing urban communities will play a major role in future balance of the environmental and ecosystem services of the world.

For individuals, climate change affects multiple areas of life, including individual and family assets, personal health, and the methods of maintaining a decent livelihood. Yet in the human settlements that lack in essential services and infrastructure, provisions for adaptation are limited and the risks factors are explosive.

But all is not gloom and doom. Urban communities can adapt and it begins now. Every city can increment steps that lean toward a sustainable alignment with risk governance. From the private sector to the power of local and community governmental resources, the opportunities for immediate action is possible even if not currently realized in practice. It begins with a strong urban government that is capable of assessing and integrating a local regulatory framework that generates local support and confidence. It requires planning, design and allocation of resources and manpower. And it needs to be processed in incremental and transformative solutions that further increase the urban confidence in adaptation outcomes.

 

Next up: A look at global warming and climate change as associated with human settlements, industry and infrastructure in rural areas.

Series presented by American Cooling and Heating, Arizona HVAC Sales and Service for Trane, Amana, Goodman, Rheem, Carrier and all other major HVAC brands. For information on current ACH 2014 A/C product promotions, contact: https://americancoolingandheating.com

 

Disclaimer:

This article and its content do not constitute legal, financial, technical, or medical advice. While every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that this document is correct at the time of publication, the company and its employees and agents disclaim any and all liability to any person in respect of anything or the consequences of anything done or omitted to be done in reliance upon the whole or any part of this article and its content. All trademarks, logos, and associated content displayed are the property of their respective owners.

 

 

  1. http://m.csmonitor.com/Environment/Energy-Voices/2014/0331/IPCC-global-warming-report-why-air-conditioning-rises-30-fold-by-2100-video#unhide
  2. http://ipcc-wg2.gov/AR5/report/final-drafts

 

Tempe AZ Trane HP and A/C Condensing System Sales-Spree Jump-Starts the Local 2014 Air Conditioning Installation and Upgrade Decision-Making Process

Trane A/C Condensing UnitsArizona HVAC Sales and Installation Center, American Cooling and Heating, Offers Cost-Effective Buyer Incentives Guaranteed to Make Buying a Trane Air Conditioning System Number One On the Tempe AZ Home Improvement List

“Age catches the equipment and before you know it homeowners are spending so much on Air Conditioning maintenance that our Trane A/C and HP condensing sale makes turning the corner of system-replacement a best-choice option for every Arizona resident,” ACH Sales rep, Tempe Arizona office.

In a land where dust storms can swell into an all out “haboob”, the outdoor A/C condensing unit faces a tough task. Wind gusts that hit sixty miles per hour and reduce visibility to ¼ mile or less don’t exactly promote peak Heat Pump performance. Yet when concentrated heat from within a structure is collected and then passed over the outside condensing coils, the fire inside a structure should be discharged into the fire outside the structure. American Cooling and Heating makes certain the process functions correctly.

For efficient operation, the exterior A/C or HP condensing unit must move lots of air quickly and effectively. Dirt, nearby debris and even overgrown bushes can hinder that flow. Failure to accomplish this task efficiency imposes additional ware and tear on the entire heating and cooling system. To ensure efficient operation of exterior Air Conditioning and Heat Pump condensing coils, American cooling and Heating recommends that Arizona homeowners contract for an ACH semi-annual A/C tune-up program, a program that includes cleaning the coils as well as making other major equipment performance adjustments.

If the fan in the A/C condensing unit cannot move sufficient air at a reasonable pace, the cost of home cooling increases, the waste of resources necessary for generating electricity rises, and the life cycle of the outdoor cooling unit decreases. Sometimes the solution lies in proper HVAC equipment maintenance. But sometimes wear-and-tear combines with age to indicate the need for a better solution that includes replacement of the exterior system with a new Trane Heat Pump or Trane Air Conditioning condensing unit.

Now is the time to get best pricing on all ACH installed Tempe AZ and other regional East Valley Trane air conditioning equipment. Throughout 2014 American Cooling and Heating is pricing Trane HVAC sales and installation to jump-start local A/C buying decisions. The deals are already available. There is no need to wait for better pricing. It’s a win-win situation. ACH gets to pay more taxes and that makes the IRS smile. Tempe AZ homeowners save money on the cost of replacing or installing new Trane cooling and heating equipment and that makes the family smile.

Quick Overview of Trane Air Conditioning Condensing Units

On Sale Trane XV Series A/C Condensing Units

*  XV20i Energy Star rated with support for up to 20 SEER, 55 dB sound rating and precision comfort to ½ degree.

*  XV18 Energy Star rated with support for up to 18 SEER at a nominal sound level of 55 dB and with humidity control comfort features.

 

On Sale Trane XL Series A/C Condensing Units

*  XL20i Energy Star rated supporting up to 20 SEER, 72 dB nominal sound rating and Dual Climatuff® compressors.

*  XL18i with Energy Star ratings at up to 18 SEER. Includes two-stage Climatuff® compressor and Trane’s exclusive Spine Fin™ coil. All with 73 dB nominal sound level.

*  XL16i Energy Star rated, 16.50 SEER efficiency, installed exclusive Spine Fin™ coil technology and the durability of a Climatuff® compressor. Nominal sound level hangs at 73 dB.

*  XL15i with Energy Star ratings, 16.50 SEER, Climatuff® compressor, 73 dB nominal sound level and the exclusive Trane Spine Fin™ coil system.

 

On Sale Trane XR Series A/C Condensing Units

*  XR17 with up to 18 SEER from an Energy Star rated unit boasting the Trane two-stage Climatuff® compressor and the Trane-exclusive Spine Fin™ coil system. Holds a 74 dB nominal sound level.

*  XR16 Energy Star ratings with up to 17 SEER on a Climatuff® compressor backed by the exclusive Spine Fin™ coil system.

*  XR15 with up to 17 SEER on a Trane Climatuff® compressor backed by the exclusive Spine Fin™ coil. Energy Star rated and with 74 dB nominal sound rating.

*  XR13 Energy Star ratings backed by the Climatuff® compressor with supporting exclusive Spine Fin™ coil system. Up to 14.50 SEER at 75 dB sound ratings.

 

On Sale Trane XB Series A/C Condensing Units

*  XB16 Supporting up to 16.50 SEER at 79 dB in an Energy Star rated unit backed with the exclusive Trane Spine Fin™ coil efficiency.

*  XB14 Energy Star rated, Climatuff® compressor driven unit sporting up to 16.50 SEER on the exclusive Spine Fin™ coil efficiency system. Nominal sound rating: 78 dB.

*  XB13 Energy Star unit that uses the Climatuff® compressor wrapped in the exclusive Spine Fin™ coil system. Supports up to 14.50 SEER.

*  XB300 Compact unit support up to 13 SEER on the Climatuff® Compressor. Not Energy Star rated but makes great low-cost home system. Nominal sound rating runs 82 dB.

All ACH delivered and installed Trane air conditioning sales packages include:

**  Custom sizing for the right residential fit

**  24/7 support line

**  Quality workmanship

**  Guaranteed installation according to manufacturer specifications and local/national codes

**  ACH lifetime workmanship warranty

**   AND much more.

 

Sale prices are available on all models of Trane A/C condensing systems, but the ACH Trane sale is not limited to outdoor components. American Cooling and Heating sells and installs complete HVAC solutions as manufactured by nearly every major system provider on the planet, including Amana, Carrier, Goodman, Rheem, Trane and others. Pricing plus service plus warranty is what makes American Cooling and Heating a top-line HVAC dealer.

**    A/C Systems

**    Heat Pumps

**    HP Package Units

**    Split Heat Pump Systems

**    AND More.

 

Contact: https://americancoolingandheating.com/on-sale/air-conditioning-sales-in-arizona

 

 

Disclaimer:

This article and its content do not constitute legal, financial, technical, or medical advice. While every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that this document is correct at the time of publication, the company and its employees and agents disclaim any and all liability to any person in respect of anything or the consequences of anything done or omitted to be done in reliance upon the whole or any part of this article and its content. All trademarks, logos, and associated content displayed are the property of their respective owners.

 

Arizona Air Conditioning Benefits From New Energy Saving Technologies

Arizona Air Conditioning - Temperature key for the "five-year average global temperature anomalies from 1880 to 2010" video

Can New Innovations in Arizona Air Conditioning Cut Your Rate of Energy Consumption?

 

Arizona Air Conditioning – Even as global warming increases and temperatures rise, the technology to produce more energy efficient HVAC equipment moves forward. Throughout the world, including Phoenix, Mesa and other Arizona regions, the demand for reliable cost-efficient home and office A/C performance is on the increase. The heat wave is here and the future will bring even more.

But will the new innovations in air conditioning actually reduce your Arizona energy bills?

Rising Energy Consumption Reflects A Worldwide Growth In Air Conditioning Demands

Even as the summer sun settles beneath the horizon and fall slips upon Phoenix AZ and other U.S. cities, the luxury of home air conditioning remains a worldwide desire. China and India are finally coming to age, demanding home cooling equipment and driving an A/C buying spree that is increasing at the rate of 20 percent per year.  According to the national energy experts, home cooling in the United States requires as much as 185 billion kilowatt-hours of yearly energy consumption. How much demand will ride the coattails of China and India?

Somehow, we must learn to beat the heat without fueling the fires of global warming. We cannot continue to fuel cooling systems with fossil fuels. According to Cheryl Martin deputy director of the U.S. Advanced Research Project Agency for Energy (ARPA-E), prevention and control lies in technology that can reduce the energy consumption of air conditioning equipment.

ARPA-E Funding Applied to New Innovations in A/C Technology

By using chlorofluorocarbons and other refrigerants to absorb heat, conventional air conditioning systems collect internal heat and then expel it into the outside environment. The process requires electricity to power compressors and pumps. New alternatives seek to replace refrigerant materials with solid materials that consume less energy. ARPA-E funding encourages a development of technology that will enable a thermoelectric solid to absorb heat. 

  • The end goal: Produce cheaper refrigerators and air conditioning equipment
  • What makes it effective: A lack of moving parts
  • The results: Fewer breakdowns and better reliability in rural areas.

A/C Technology That Uses Membranes and Water Condensing Processes

A project that began with funding via ARPA-E makes use of specialty membranes capable of producing cool air by condensing water. Under development by Dais Analytic Corp, ADMA and other “new innovation air conditioning” performers, the projects have become so effective as to pick up financial backing from the U.S. Navy. The system is being designed to meet the air conditioning and dehumidifier needs for troops and equipment in Afghanistan and Iraq. Efficiency improvements are expected to reach 30 percent or more. This means less fuel consumption, less transportation needs and less life endangerment due to fewer convoys.

Think about how effective such a cost-efficient system would be as an alternative Arizona Air Conditioning solution. A system that supports Navy troops is well worth consideration for home use.

Time is, of course, an issue. From development to commercial, home and office use, membrane technologies will go through many changes. The Navy is pushing. Expect the technology to move forward quickly and efficiently. ARPA-E discussions even include the possibility of cooling via the power of magnets or sound waves.

Affects on Mesa, Scottsdale and Other Phoenix Arizona Air Conditioning Requirements

According to the National Weather Service Phoenix AZ, recent Valley temperatures have exceeded 122 °F+. Some stretches of 100 °F+ temperatures have run as long as 76 days. More efficient Arizona air conditioning can benefit the people and the city. Meeting the growing demand for better cooling in a way that cost-effectively reduces the greenhouse consequences should be a priority of every citizen.

 For more information on how new Air Conditioning technology can improve your Phoenix home comfort level, click here.

 

Leaky Heat Pumps Expensive To Operate and Unhealthy Too

Leaky Heat Pumps - Old CarrierLeaky Heat Pumps Waste Refrigerant

Although leaky heat pumps may waste refrigerant, they do not consume refrigerant. If your home or business Phoenix air conditioning system requires frequent refrigerant “top-offs,” the unit is not using refrigerant; it is leaking refrigerant. For you this means increased operating costs, less HP efficiency and possible contamination the eco-system.

Any HVAC unit that requires frequent refrigerant charges should be checked for cause and effect. You need to understand that merely adding refrigerant is not a variable solution to the leaky heat pump expensive operating faults. Quality Arizona Air Conditioning Repair never simply add AC refrigerant to a leaking heat pump. Testing the system is the only efficient solution to a heat pump or AC leak. This means isolating and repairing the leak before correcting the system’s refrigerant pressure.

 

Older Leaky Heat Pumps Use Unhealthy Chlorodifluoromethane Gases

Since the early 1990s, the U.S. has been in the process of phasing out chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22 or R-22 or Freon) refrigerants. Identified as a substance that depletes the planet’s ozone layer, Freon actively contributes to the dangers associated with global warming. Regulated under the 2010 Clean Air Act, Freon is banned from use in new heat pumps and other air conditioning equipment.

In order to prevent further atmosphere contamination, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) promotes recycling the gas from old air conditioning and leaky HP pump equipment. Beginning in 2020, R-22 will no longer be available for use in existing heat pumps and other air conditioning equipment. Diminishing supply is creating a continuously increase in the cost of R-22 gas. This makes your leaky HP expensive to operate as well as unhealthy to you and the rest of the world.

 

Leaky Heat Pumps Expensive To Operate

Old or new, any leaky air conditioning system is expensive to operate: 1) Because it requires additional service calls, 2) Because it functions less efficiently than a fully charged system and 3) Because it provides less household comfort. However, for older Freon-based air conditioning and heat pump units, make sure you call a Phoenix Heat Pump repair center that is EPA certified for R-22 issues. Typically identified as “Section 608 certification,” the EPA tech certification assures you that your Arizona heating and cooling repair center understands the laws, allowable uses and discharge specifications concerning R-22 refrigerant.

But remember, the cost of Freon is on the rise. Not all shops equally price the gas, so make sure you ask in advance what it will cost per pound to charge your system is leaky freon is an issue.

You might also want to consider replacing your worn Phoenix Heat Pump system. Modern HVAC equipment is remarkably more energy efficient that the older units. Along with the use of new less-expensive EPA-approved refrigerant gases, modern Heat Pumps also: 

  • Consume less electricity
  • Provide better whole-home comfort
  • Are designed for longer durability
  • Require fewer AC and Heat Pump service calls
  • Include extended product warranties and Air Conditioning installer guarantees.

 

Avoid the Waste, Expense and Health Issues

Don’t put up with the expensive waste of freon associated with leaky heat pumps. Arizona-based American Cooling and Heating provides Valley-wide residential and commercial air conditioning and heating repairs, services and installations. Our technical service team is on hand 24-hours per day, providing free estimates and repairs for all types of: 

  • Air handlers
  • Cooling equipment
  • Heat pumps,   
  • Furnaces
  • Refrigeration
  • And other HVAC Equipment.

Look for us throughout the Phoenix Arizona Metro region and all surrounding cities, towns and areas. For more info, click here.

 

 

 

 

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