Credible Air Conditioning Replacement and Repair Services

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The plumbing, heating and air conditioning business is defined by the level of trust and loyalty clients have for their providers, and that is why we at Henry Bush Plumbing Heating and Air Conditioning have maintained its large clientele base for 113 years and counting, through our exemplary air conditioning replacement and repair services.

Our major marketing tool has been through the outstanding air conditioning replacement and repair services offered, and with over 110 years of generational experience in the business, coupled with the latest technology and equipment, we can positively attest that we rank very highly in the plumbing, heating and air conditioning business in the Inland Empire.

Furthermore, our effort of providing outstanding services has not gone unnoticed, having been awarded the prestigious Carrier 2011 Presidents Award, and having been featured on Carriers website.

Award for Our Air Conditioning Replacement and Repair Services

The annual Presidents Award was started in 2007 with the sole purpose of encouraging self analysis, rewarding carrier dealers with excellent customer relations, support business improvements and show gratitude while serving as role models to other providers, in terms of exceptional products and services.

Our scorecard according to the award vetting team surpassed that of other dealers in the area. We have constantly strived to make every home as comfortable as possible in all weather conditions, and in turn rewarded by immense loyalty from our clients, a factor that was used to determine the overall winner of the award.

Exclusive Air Conditioning Replacement and Repair Services

Henry Bush Plumbing Heating and Air Conditioning has provided credible services for numerous customers in the region, earning us both local and countrywide accolades. We have acquired the highest degree of certification in the list of NATE Certified Technicians. Some of our quality air conditioning replacement and repair services range from:

  • Ducting Maintenance, Modifications & Improvements
  • System Performance Testing
  • Air Purifier Installation
  • HVAC System Upgrades
  • Energy Efficiency Upgrades
  • Aging Equipment Assessments
  • New Construction
  • Remodeling
  • Regular Maintenance
  • Equipment Repairs
  • Comfort Improvements

Quality and Affordable Air Conditioning Replacement and Repair

Earning the Dealers Carriers President Award 2011 is a stepping stone towards greater opportunities in expanding the area coverage of our service provision, provide a wide scope of air conditioning solutions and increase on our already expansive client base by earning new prospectuses.

We have tailor made quality and affordable air conditioning replacement and repair services for every home. Being the prime air conditioning service provider in the region, we personally understand the changing weather conditions of every point in the region, from the highs in the valleys and lows in the mountains, hence, we can comfortably and accurately offer an efficient and lasting air conditioning solution for every household in Inland Empire.

Don’t settle for just any air conditioning and heating contractor, call us today and we will make your home more habitable with our highly recommended air conditioning replacement and repair services. Henry Bush Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning.  1-800-25-PLUMBER

 

 

 

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Even New Homes Can Have Energy Problems

Before Photo- When we started the retrofit, we found a 1' drop ceiling under this insulation. None of the insulation was in contact with the ceiling here.

Over the winter we received a call from a home owner that was having heating and cooling issues in a 5 year old home in the Beaumont area. He complained that the house did not heat nor cool evenly and it was costing him close to $200 per month in the summer to air condition his home. He had already replaced the compressor on his unit and was at his wits end.

So, I tested his system and discovered that his system had some ducting issues that was causing it to perform well below its capacity of 4 tons of cooling ( on a house that is 2200 square feet). We came to an agreement that we would change out his ducting to fix the problems.

Back to the office I went with a drawing of the house in hand. We put it into our engineering software and found out that the house only required 2.5 tons of cooling. Now my dilemma was that if we fixed the ducting he would be oversized  and the system would short-cycle, leading to higher bills and less comfort.

So I headed back to the homeowner to tell him of this problem without trying to sound like I am switch pitching or upselling him. Thankfully, he trusted me and we embarked on a course of swapping out the entire heating and cooling system and replacing it with a new 2.5 ton system. We also eliminated a number of duct runs in the attic that were completely unnecessary. Many of the rooms had 2-3 registers in them with the registers being placed all the way out along the wall and over the windows. This means the air is spending a longer time in ducts that are in a super hot attic. The Energy Star.gov website has suggestions to shorten duct runs for this very purpose. We were able to properly size the necessary ducts and eliminate the unnecessary ones to provide enough air to cool each room.

Everything seemed to be going great with our new design until I received a call from him that his master bedroom just wasn’t cooling as well as the rest of the house, which was “perfect”.

It was upon this visit to the house that I found this badge attached to a wall in the garage I’ve intentionally blocked out the builder’s name on this, because this post is really an indictment on them for allowing poor building practices to take place in their development.

I jumped into the attic and started poking around at insulation. I had my suspicions when I was up there earlier in the season about how poorly the insulation was installed, but at first glance it looked like many of the attics I am in. The comfort issues the homeowner was having lead me to inspect further. When I did I discover that although the insulation looked level throughout, the house is full of drop ceilings and interstitial spaces (huge cavities in the wall)  that weren’t properly insulated. If they were, I would have noticed differing levels in the attic. Here are some pictures.

The most alarming thing about all of this mess, was that this homeowner thought he bought a home that was energy efficient. We found more than what is shown here but much of it didn’t photograph well enough to document.

Bear in mind, with the HVAC retrofit that we had done in the winter, the homeowner had already seen a reduction in electricity bills. He said his most recent one was $90 verses $190 last year. So he was happy about the current energy savings. We just set out to address his comfort issue in the bedroom.

After I reported to him what I found in the attic, he asked us to come back and air seal, retrofit what he had currently so that it was done right and add more insulation. We did so. We air sealed everywhere in the attic. We made sure that all of the existing rolled batt insulation was cut to size and touched 5 sides of the bays. We retrofitted the knee walls so that they would perform correctly and our final step was to blow in 6 more inches of blown in cellulose insulation over everything (an additional R-19+ to the existing). The attic now is performing at R-38+ and the house is much more comfortable. The homeowners bills will come down even more and, as importantly, he will be comfortable in all rooms of his home.

People often tell me that they have huge electric bills in newer homes. It shouldn’t be that way but because of poor building practices in homes that are much larger than homes in the past with many more architectural features built throughout, it is more often true, than not. So don’t accept high bills as a necessary part of living in a larger, newer home. It doesn’t have to be that way.

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Infrared Photos From Yesterday’s Energy Audit

Air leaking through a switchplate

Yesterday we ran down the road to Mission Viejo to do an energy audit. It was a beautiful spring day in Orange County, which meant that there wasn’t a great deal of difference between the outdoor temperature and the indoor temperature of this couple’s beautiful home. We were a little concerned that the thermal imaging camera that we use would not get the best pictures because of this small temperature differential. Thankfully, that worry was all for naught. We got some very good photos of problems in this house. These are fairly typical in the houses that we see.

You can see where the insulation has been compromised around this switch plate. The house was negatively pressurized for this photo allowing you to see air move from the wall to the room. Read More

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Smart Meters- What are they and How Will They Effect Me?

Smart Meter

Back in October I installed a new heating and A/C system at my house. It was HOT on the final day of the install and I had a houseful of people heading my way that evening. We flipped on the air conditioner and it successfully cooled the house before everyone arrived. I was excited to see how much less electricity that the new system was using, so I ran out to my electric meter hoping to watch the little wheel spin ever so slowly. I was shocked and a bit disappointed to find that someone had switched out my old, trusty meter for one of the new Smart Grid digital meters. Read More

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Crazy Stuff We See In The Field

Ugly Installation

Here are some pictures taken by Doug, one of our amazing HVAC Service Techs, of an installation he saw in a house this week. The call came in that their house was not heating and cooling properly. It is now wonder, after seeing these pictures.

Check out the 4" return platform made out of a crate. Nice use of 2 coils stacked on top of each other. The "return" is to the right of the washer and dryer and pulls only from the garage.

Here is another photo

Here is where the "return" air enters the 4" platform.

And yet another

Close up of the platform

Hot garage air, fumes from the car and whatever other things may have been stored in the garage, not to mention hot/cold air were the only things feeding into this system.

For those of you not too familiar with how air conditioning is supposed to work, here is the short version. A blower pushes air into your house through the supply ducts. It is then sucked back into the blower through a return duct. Each time it gradually gets hotter or colder, depending on whether you are in cooling or heating mode. Eventually, it reaches the  desired temperature set on your thermostat and shuts down.

In the case of this system, it isn’t sucking in any air from the house, since all of the air enters from the garage, unless of course the door from the house to the garage is always open (yuck).

There are a lot of things wrong with this installation above. Worse, I think that they are going to keep it this way. Doug turned this over to me so that we could fix it, but the homeowner hasn’t responded to my messages. Hopefully, she will get it fixed.  She was advised that this is not only a nightmare from a comfort and high utility bill standpoint, but more importantly, dangerous to their health.

 

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