Filed under: Home and Garden, Home Improvement, Home Repair, Uncategorized | Tags: Oklahoma air conditioning
Oklahoma Air Conditioning is the dehumidification of indoor air for thermal comfort. In a broader sense, the term can refer to any form of cooling, heating, ventilation, or disinfection that modifies the condition of air. An air conditioner (often referred to as AC or air con.) is an appliance, system, or machine designed to stabilize the air temperature and humidity within an area (used for cooling as well as heating depending on the air properties at a given time), typically using a refrigeration cycle but sometimes using evaporation, commonly for comfort cooling in buildings and motor vehicles. Ducts are used in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) to deliver and remove air. These needed airflows include, for example, supply air, return air, and exhaust air. Ducts also deliver, most commonly as part of the supply air, ventilation air. As such, air ducts are one method of ensuring acceptable indoor air quality as well as thermal comfort. A duct system is often called ductwork. Planning (‘laying out’), sizing, optimizing, detailing, and finding the pressure losses through a duct system is called duct design.
Your Oklahoma Air Conditioning cooling system just made it through another long, dormant winter and will soon be called into months of difficulty duty. Get it ready for action with a comprehensive tune-up this spring.
To keep your system running at peak efficiency, our technicians will perform the following during spring tune-Up:
• Check thermostat settings to ensure the system turns on and off at the programmed temperatures.
• Tighten all electrical connections and measure voltage and current on motors.
• Lubricate all moving parts. Parts that lack lubrication cause friction in motors and increase the amount of electricity used.
• Check and inspect the condensate drain in your central air conditioner, furnace and/ or heat pump (when in cooling mode). If clogged, the drain can cause water damage in the house, affect indoor humidity levels, and breed bacteria and mold.
• Check the starting cycle of the equipment to assure the system starts, operates and shuts off properly.
• Clean indoor and outdoor air-conditioner coils. Dirty coils cause systems to run poorly & inefficiently.
• Check the unit’s refrigerant charge and adjust it if necessary to make sure it meets manufacturer specifications.
Clean and adjust blower components to provide proper system airflow. As much as half the energy used in your home goes to cooling it during the summer months. Just as a tune-up for your car can improve gas mileage, a yearly tune-up of your cooling system can improve energy efficiency.
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