get that alot when people ask me to do side work and I say yea that can't be done right for those prices. They freak out and pay another guy and still ask me to fix their stupid messes. I tell them pound sand
Oh my gosh! Ted, please request a visit from your state licensing board investigator to come look at this. Someone needs to be held accountable, it's criminal to do something like this.
Probably another fly by night company, that always goes under and then pops up the following year later somewhere else with a different name to do the same garbage installs.
Ted, Ted, Ted…..don’t you know that’s a test unit🙄 seriously, I’ve seen it all now lol, that’s a new one to me, even better than the garden hose gas line I once found.
There is no fixing this, it has to be replaced. At least completely removed and reinstalled, but it would probably cost almost as to just replace. There is no possible way this is legal, why would he put his name on it?
Ted, did you check to see if whoever lives in the house has a big life insurance policy and the person who put in the furnace is named as the beneficiary? Sure looks like a possibility.
I’m a rookie installer(8 months experience) Even I know better than that. I don’t know how that even worked. The lengths some guys go to not do the job right is scary. Keep up the good work. I learn something new watching all the time.
It "worked" because the unit was hiding in the crawlspace and the customer didn't see puddles, smell exhaust gas or hear all that sheet metal and tape flopping around. You always see the worst installs in crawlspaces because they think they can get away with it long enough to not get in trouble.
Imagine thinking that this is beyond anything that a "pro" could hack up. If it's beneath you to do butcher jobs like that great but you need be less naive.
I am a retired former co-owner of a Carrier dealership in southeastern Pennsylvania, and for most of those eighteen years Pennsylvania did not require businesses to maintain contractor licensure, other than a federal EIN and PA Commonwealth sales tax collection licensing. We installed Carrier, and most of the ICP companion line of products. Johnstone was fairly strict about whom they would sell to, however, two other wholesalers were not. I'd seen only one installation, of a Coleman 80% gas furnace - that was paired with a ComfortMaker (midline quality model). The ¾-in lineset was cobbled together from used type "M" red copper, and was soldered with "good 'ol lead/tin plumbing solder". The liquid line was apparently used automotive brake line tubing. The insulation was blue "funoodle" pool toy tubing which was sliced in half, and duct taped together. The thermostat was wired directly to the condensing unit, ass-backwards, and on the wall where the thermostat, a round Honeywell was hung, it partnered with three light switches which selected the A/C, Heat, and fan only functions. It was nothing short of criminal, but it worked, I don't know how or why, but the darn thing worked. I got out of there as fast as I could, "no charge, I couldn't do anything, you'll need to call someone else". Two years later, my business partner installed a new Bryant system, at almost below cost after the heating failed in December.
I'm really enjoying these videos.Im an auto mechanic and it's interesting to see what goes on in other trades. We see hack jobs all the time especially with wiring lol
That is the continued reason why inspections from local jurisdictions are needed. I am never amazed at how people have no idea how to do a job properly. That poor homeowner got robbed. They are lucky they are alive. Stay safe and be well.
When I was 17 fixing my first car, I used a hose clamp to hold the muffler on but I used common sense and cut a slit in there first so the pipe would mash on the other one better LOL.
Glad you’re posting these hack jobs, I’ve seen some doozies myself. Makes you wonder sometimes if these installers realized they could kill somebody and or burn the place down, probably not. But they probably got paid upfront and stopped answering the phone.
What a mess! Saw a lot of hack jobs like that in the auto industry. We would take our shop customers back and show them exactly what was going on and what would be needed to repair it. Just when you think you have seen it all! Hopefully there will be a part 2 where Ted removes it all and does a quality new install with potential problems taken care of also. Great video and a good call for Ted to come out by the previous tech. Keep up the great videos! Still learning new things and enjoying the videos along the way.
Hi Ted. Always enjoy your videos. I am about to do a complete change out and wanted to know if it is required to replace the refrigerant lines. Some contractors say that it is fine and they will just be cleaned. We had a 30 year old Carrier which died this past Friday and it uses R-22. Of course we ill be going to a unit with 410 and I understand that oxidation and/or particles from the old oil many create problems down the road if the lines are not flushed properly or replaced. About 40 feet. I live in the triad of North Carolina. Thanks and anyone else PLEASE feel free to chime in.
A "furnace man" quotes a new customer. They ask if he has any experience. Oh yes several he replies. Oh great, the customer asks where ? Crazy thing he says....all three are gone. Two burnt and one blew up.
Where to begin, this is wrong on so many levels. You are 100% correct in refusing to work on that dangerous mess. However, as we always say, the last one to touch it is responsible-liable. So why did you mess with it? What happens when the homeowner cannot afford to fix it and tries to use as-is? Ethically, legally, practically, what you did was NO BUENO. Should have just taken pics, explained the problem/solution to the customer. Now his choice is no heat, even more dangerous than before heat or potentially having to choose between eating or perhaps making his next mortgage pmt and fixing the furnace.
Read the room, it's an affluent neighborhood, and besides, the furnace was already inop, it was LOTO'd and a tech or handy homeowner would have to work to recommission it, making them liable since they made it run again, what he did was what the locals around here call destructive speculation, which is what we do when something will need fixed regardless, we tear it up a bit to see the scope of the problem to better figure a quote while also further ensuring that someone will have to touch it after us to make us work, making them liable, if it's a reinstall or replacement job I go further to ensure any skeezy tech or handyman will have to do a lot of work to make the unit operable again, I also make them sign a waiver stating that I LOTO'd the unit and recommend proper corrective actions be taken, if it is recommissioned without proper corrective repairs being performed by me then I am not liable in the slightest for death, destruction, or anything in between resulting from the furnace being operated, I had a lawyer friend painstakingly revise the waiver so there are no legal loopholes and the document has the power to dismiss any civil or legal cases brought up due to anything mentioned in the waiver, haven't had to use it yet, but better safe than sorry in today's litigious society, and if they don't sign the waiver I call the gas company and have their technician condemn and turn off the gas to the whole home, had to do it once, they had the bare minimum done for the gas company to deem it safe and haven't called me back.
It's crazy some of the stuff you see! A furnace on it's back! I remember that one in the attic that you had video of. I think it was a carrier if I remember right...
Have they run the exhaust up the old chimney? Do you have to run a liner n the chimney.? Looks like the installer bought the parts from a scrap yard and home depot.
I put a 90% in a crawl space once. Home owners request. It got so cold down there it froze the inducer motor and split it. I’d just say. Don’t level the new one. Lean that thing forward on a good forward slant. That helps keep the water from pooling in the inducer. I’m shocked at some of those hack jobs. How do these guys keep their jobs??? How do the companies stay in business with work like that ?? I’d fire anyone that turned that shit in. When I trained guys. And heard. “That’s good enough”. I’d say good enough for who?? Me? The boss? The home owner? If that’s the best you can do. That’s all I can ask But good enough is seldom “good enough”
It hurts us pretty bad too. We have to compete with non companies. I got outbidded on 14 new house installs by over $1000 each. They are two brothers making extra money. They have jobs with insurance, no overhead, no employees and probably no insurance. It drives the prices way below what they should be. This contractor tried to get me to come get some of the systems running that they had trouble with. I said sorry..
I agree this is a horrible install but like you said its been heating with no issues, no damage to heat exchanger or wiring in over 10 years. I don't understand why you tore it all apart without informing the customer first. Now they have no choice but to either pay to repair what you tore out and pulled apart or replace the equipment. I enjoy watching your videos but you didn't have to do all that ripping and tearing in my humble opinion. Now the a/c is compromised. Heating season is practically over. You could have shut off the gas and disabled the heat if you are concerned about liability.
Because it isn't code, the state can pull his license if he let that run. Just because it can "run" doesn't make it legal or safe. People want it for cheap and then have the balls to bitch when it needs to be made right to work or even be code. Here is a thought its the homeowners fault they hired a fly by night, no name guy in work van who did that illegal work. Now homeowners expect actual pros to rig it to run so they have heat or air, hell no. Fix it right or you don't have air or heat simple as that. We can be sued when it kills someone if it is allowed to run. I never feel sorry for homeowners that get a craiglist special job and expect us to fix it for cheap, go pound sand
This video need to be shown at trade schools to show students how not to install things. If I was the home, I would do whatever it takes to find out who created this train wreck & have them brought up on charges & also have them kicked out of the business!!!
It wasn't yet his job to repair or replace, but Ted tore the thing apart when examining it. Seems very unfair to totally disable the thing. I think he had a lot of nerve, it isn't his property to damage that way. If I was that customer, I would hold him responsible for damaging my property.
@@kingpins9 Sounds like you must have a man crush on ole Ted. LOL You don't know what the hell you are talking about! I've been an HVAC contractor for over 30 yrs. It was not necessary nor did he have the right to tear the vent pipe and transition apart the way he did. Its not his home and he is not paying for the repairs. He should have taken pictures and showed the homeowner what he found and what he recommends be done to properly and safely make the repairs. But he chose to rip open the duct transition and dismantle vent pipe leaving both the heat and the a/c more so compromised than before he arrived. That's not right, any way you spin it!
Omg I'm half way through my hvacr training and I myself can see a crap job that one is definitely unsafe. I hope there is a 2nd part with a correct safe install.
Definitely not an approved orientation for the furnace, the venting is just icing on the cake. I've actually found them installed like that where they finally quit working because condensation at formed in the heat exchanger and pooled up enough to block it.
I think the outside unit said 2016 on it. Looks fairly new. Can't believe someone would touch that or install it that way. My grandfather is rolling in his grave.
It’s an old line set they probably had service valves but they couldn’t turn on or off so they soldered some Sauter on Schrader valves probably had a pretty low unit of an old singer
I know more crooked techs than good ones. Being honest has kept me busier than I can handle. I'm not sure if the crooked ones just dont know or they know but do it on purpose. Thanks for being one of the good guys.
As an electrician I can tell you that there are twelve(12) NEC violations in the electrical half of that install, including 3 red flag violations that the fire department would declare the house unsafe to inhabit...
at 13:45 you ask what the thing on the AC compressor line is fore, my guess is to hook in to the line with test gages but i am no ac technician but that the only thing that makes sense to me about those lines
as a side note... holy crap they spent more money and time on duck and duct tape than they would have spent on the screws to secure all that together.....
Fire hazard as well, the electric and gas entering in the same hole ,especially with appliance connector is totally illegal, and a appliance cannot pass thru a wall of the furnace
I see someone left the screws on the supply house counter. The extra taps on the line set are probably from the tech that did the FD. I bet whoever did the line set to the condenser didn’t remove the Schraders and smoked them. The next guy said I ain’t touching it.
@@TedCookHVAC it was older than that by mfr date, but it looked like it just came out of the box. I don’t understand how no wires were fried or the cabinet scorched with the burners shooting down like that. I’m assuming you got the replacement job? I’m not seeing follow ups to some of these videos that are open ended situations.
I am watching HVAC videos to help get an idea of what I'm going to school for which I do for the most part but I am like W.T.F is wrong with some people. That was a hack or shit job done buy someone trying to make a quick buck instead of the long term service that makes more money but I'm new going to school for HVAC what do I know. Have a great day!
"My brother's uncle's cousin's brother said he would install it for $500"
I got a guy that'll do it for onefity 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤦
get that alot when people ask me to do side work and I say yea that can't be done right for those prices. They freak out and pay another guy and still ask me to fix their stupid messes. I tell them pound sand
500 to install a furnace is the kind of cheap that would get any furnace butcher installed similar to this one.
Oh my gosh! Ted, please request a visit from your state licensing board investigator to come look at this. Someone needs to be held accountable, it's criminal to do something like this.
Probably another fly by night company, that always goes under and then pops up the following year later somewhere else with a different name to do the same garbage installs.
Lol. Pennsylvania doesn’t have a licensing board. Imagine what the HVAC looks like here! 🤣
Ted, Ted, Ted…..don’t you know that’s a test unit🙄 seriously, I’ve seen it all now lol, that’s a new one to me, even better than the garden hose gas line I once found.
I don't know how you stay so calm and collected discovering these disasters! You really Crack me up with your responses 🤣
This is what we call a “two dozen roll” job in the professional tape installation industry
I’m over half way through hoping you have a part two where you fix this mess
There is no fixing this, it has to be replaced. At least completely removed and reinstalled, but it would probably cost almost as to just replace. There is no possible way this is legal, why would he put his name on it?
Another vertical horizontal furnace?! Seems to be a popular practice in your neck of the woods, Ted. I needed a good laugh today and i got one
the all new "vertizontal" furnace lol.
I was thinking the same thing. 28 years have yet to see one on its back.
Ted, did you check to see if whoever lives in the house has a big life insurance policy and the person who put in the furnace is named as the beneficiary? Sure looks like a possibility.
I’m a rookie installer(8 months experience) Even I know better than that. I don’t know how that even worked. The lengths some guys go to not do the job right is scary. Keep up the good work. I learn something new watching all the time.
It "worked" because the unit was hiding in the crawlspace and the customer didn't see puddles, smell exhaust gas or hear all that sheet metal and tape flopping around. You always see the worst installs in crawlspaces because they think they can get away with it long enough to not get in trouble.
My thinking is that it would be as easy to install it correctly. I'm thinking someone installed who didn't have an idea what he was doing
A clear case of DIY!! I want to see an itemized bill with that screw clamp.
Imagine thinking that this is beyond anything that a "pro" could hack up. If it's beneath you to do butcher jobs like that great but you need be less naive.
You know it's bad when the Big Guy has to take over...
Your commentary is always the best part of your videos.
Tape on exhaust is bad enough but using it to fix different size pipe was unbelievable, they sure didn’t care about anyone in that house
And people wonder what permits are for.......
Its the home owners wanting to cheap out and not hiring a reputable contractor
We need closure on this one Ted! Follow up video please!
I am a retired former co-owner of a Carrier dealership in southeastern Pennsylvania, and for most of those eighteen years Pennsylvania did not require businesses to maintain contractor licensure, other than a federal EIN and PA Commonwealth sales tax collection licensing. We installed Carrier, and most of the ICP companion line of products. Johnstone was fairly strict about whom they would sell to, however, two other wholesalers were not. I'd seen only one installation, of a Coleman 80% gas furnace - that was paired with a ComfortMaker (midline quality model).
The ¾-in lineset was cobbled together from used type "M" red copper, and was soldered with "good 'ol lead/tin plumbing solder". The liquid line was apparently used automotive brake line tubing. The insulation was blue "funoodle" pool toy tubing which was sliced in half, and duct taped together.
The thermostat was wired directly to the condensing unit, ass-backwards, and on the wall where the thermostat, a round Honeywell was hung, it partnered with three light switches which selected the A/C, Heat, and fan only functions.
It was nothing short of criminal, but it worked, I don't know how or why, but the darn thing worked. I got out of there as fast as I could, "no charge, I couldn't do anything, you'll need to call someone else". Two years later, my business partner installed a new Bryant system, at almost below cost after the heating failed in December.
I'm really enjoying these videos.Im an auto mechanic and it's interesting to see what goes on in other trades. We see hack jobs all the time especially with wiring lol
That is the continued reason why inspections from local jurisdictions are needed. I am never amazed at how people have no idea how to do a job properly. That poor homeowner got robbed. They are lucky they are alive. Stay safe and be well.
Home owner installed. Not even a dumb company would do this.
It worked ok all these years! How many times have we heard that!
I love how the furnace is laying on its back and the exhaust is not sloped and duct taped without screws.
I am going to borrow some of Steve Lav's words on that one. That was a Real Shit Show.
As you know Russell, Steve is the corrective master of the flying feces.
I'd love to have seen him encounter this hackjob
When I was 17 fixing my first car, I used a hose clamp to hold the muffler on but I used common sense and cut a slit in there first so the pipe would mash on the other one better LOL.
Glad you’re posting these hack jobs, I’ve seen some doozies myself. Makes you wonder sometimes if these installers realized they could kill somebody and or burn the place down, probably not. But they probably got paid upfront and stopped answering the phone.
Agreed to the new furnace sir 😳 😆😂 fix it I would be running outa there like I saw a ghost 👻
Cousin Ed did this job. Cousin Ed learned everything he knows about HVAC from stealing compressors at dentists offices for meth money.
Good job Ted, we have to keep our customers safe, most of the time they have no idea
What a mess! Saw a lot of hack jobs like that in the auto industry. We would take our shop customers back and show them exactly what was going on and what would be needed to repair it. Just when you think you have seen it all! Hopefully there will be a part 2 where Ted removes it all and does a quality new install with potential problems taken care of also. Great video and a good call for Ted to come out by the previous tech. Keep up the great videos! Still learning new things and enjoying the videos along the way.
Glad to see that area of the country is up on training it's installers.
Hi Ted. Always enjoy your videos. I am about to do a complete change out and wanted to know if it is required to replace the refrigerant lines. Some contractors say that it is fine and they will just be cleaned. We had a 30 year old Carrier which died this past Friday and it uses R-22. Of course we ill be going to a unit with 410 and I understand that oxidation and/or particles from the old oil many create problems down the road if the lines are not flushed properly or replaced. About 40 feet. I live in the triad of North Carolina. Thanks and anyone else PLEASE feel free to chime in.
Wow Ted! That's a real lulu. I hope your were able to help them somehow.
Well the good news is we maybe be able to save the floor registers.... what a disaster
A "furnace man" quotes a new customer. They ask if he has any experience. Oh yes several he replies. Oh great, the customer asks where ? Crazy thing he says....all three are gone. Two burnt and one blew up.
Where to begin, this is wrong on so many levels. You are 100% correct in refusing to work on that dangerous mess. However, as we always say, the last one to touch it is responsible-liable. So why did you mess with it? What happens when the homeowner cannot afford to fix it and tries to use as-is? Ethically, legally, practically, what you did was NO BUENO. Should have just taken pics, explained the problem/solution to the customer. Now his choice is no heat, even more dangerous than before heat or potentially having to choose between eating or perhaps making his next mortgage pmt and fixing the furnace.
Read the room, it's an affluent neighborhood, and besides, the furnace was already inop, it was LOTO'd and a tech or handy homeowner would have to work to recommission it, making them liable since they made it run again, what he did was what the locals around here call destructive speculation, which is what we do when something will need fixed regardless, we tear it up a bit to see the scope of the problem to better figure a quote while also further ensuring that someone will have to touch it after us to make us work, making them liable, if it's a reinstall or replacement job I go further to ensure any skeezy tech or handyman will have to do a lot of work to make the unit operable again, I also make them sign a waiver stating that I LOTO'd the unit and recommend proper corrective actions be taken, if it is recommissioned without proper corrective repairs being performed by me then I am not liable in the slightest for death, destruction, or anything in between resulting from the furnace being operated, I had a lawyer friend painstakingly revise the waiver so there are no legal loopholes and the document has the power to dismiss any civil or legal cases brought up due to anything mentioned in the waiver, haven't had to use it yet, but better safe than sorry in today's litigious society, and if they don't sign the waiver I call the gas company and have their technician condemn and turn off the gas to the whole home, had to do it once, they had the bare minimum done for the gas company to deem it safe and haven't called me back.
It's crazy some of the stuff you see! A furnace on it's back! I remember that one in the attic that you had video of. I think it was a carrier if I remember right...
Looks like they forgot the spray glue! 😂🤣😂🤣.
Good call by ur tech!
Hey Ted, you sure do get some doozies...thanks for sharing!
You started the demo for the repair guys too...😜
Left us hanging..... well what did the customer do???!
We replaced the system.
thank god
Nothing more fun than busting up failed stuff you know you're gonna lockout.
Bad heat exchangers are my favorite.
Ahhh, cmon Ted. That'll all buff right out!
Hackory dackory dock that company cleaned their clock!
That's probably the same company that installed that other furnace on its back in the attic.
The dryer flex worm gear clamp on a solid piece of metal was just too much... what a Bozo !!
@@TedCookHVAC 🤡🤡🤡
Another quality installation thanks to Fly by night heating and cooling , UNREAL !
This is what happens when customers don’t want to spend any money, and they want the GC to compete on price with hacks...
I have learned so much from this dude. Thanks, plus all my family lives in Salem, SC....
That's a hillbilly hackjob right there! If that was a contractor, I wonder how people like that stay in business? Absolute disaster!
Have they run the exhaust up the old chimney? Do you have to run a liner n the chimney.?
Looks like the installer bought the parts from a scrap yard and home depot.
Surprisingly clean inside the furnace and duct work
I put a 90% in a crawl space once. Home owners request. It got so cold down there it froze the inducer motor and split it. I’d just say. Don’t level the new one. Lean that thing forward on a good forward slant. That helps keep the water from pooling in the inducer.
I’m shocked at some of those hack jobs. How do these guys keep their jobs??? How do the companies stay in business with work like that ?? I’d fire anyone that turned that shit in.
When I trained guys. And heard. “That’s good enough”. I’d say good enough for who?? Me? The boss? The home owner? If that’s the best you can do. That’s all I can ask But good enough is seldom “good enough”
I wish there were a good way to hold someone accountable for work like that.
Probably diy
Damn!!! Now Ive seen it all. Cant believe they have been running that since 2011. At least you have some great Techs working for you Ted!!!
This is why I'm happy to live in a state where everything requires a permit to be done and inspection and a license
It hurts us pretty bad too. We have to compete with non companies. I got outbidded on 14 new house installs by over $1000 each. They are two brothers making extra money. They have jobs with insurance, no overhead, no employees and probably no insurance. It drives the prices way below what they should be. This contractor tried to get me to come get some of the systems running that they had trouble with. I said sorry..
Man I would pay money to just be a fly on the wall to watch these "geniuses" slap shit like this together.
Its a great day when you see the notification for anew Anti DIY HVAC video! Rock on brother
Snicker Snicker oh Dear............. Now We know some of those houses we saw Blow up happened.
Holy. Crap. On it's back no less?!? Terrifying..
That heavy sigh said it all......
I agree this is a horrible install but like you said its been heating with no issues, no damage to heat exchanger or wiring in over 10 years. I don't understand why you tore it all apart without informing the customer first. Now they have no choice but to either pay to repair what you tore out and pulled apart or replace the equipment. I enjoy watching your videos but you didn't have to do all that ripping and tearing in my humble opinion. Now the a/c is compromised. Heating season is practically over. You could have shut off the gas and disabled the heat if you are concerned about liability.
Because it isn't code, the state can pull his license if he let that run. Just because it can "run" doesn't make it legal or safe. People want it for cheap and then have the balls to bitch when it needs to be made right to work or even be code.
Here is a thought its the homeowners fault they hired a fly by night, no name guy in work van who did that illegal work. Now homeowners expect actual pros to rig it to run so they have heat or air, hell no. Fix it right or you don't have air or heat simple as that. We can be sued when it kills someone if it is allowed to run. I never feel sorry for homeowners that get a craiglist special job and expect us to fix it for cheap, go pound sand
Did you also notice the slope on the exhaust? It is illegal the way the flue was installed. Tearing that out was a good thing.
This video need to be shown at trade schools to show students how not to install things. If I was the home, I would do whatever it takes to find out who created this train wreck & have them brought up on charges & also have them kicked out of the business!!!
It wasn't yet his job to repair or replace, but Ted tore the thing apart when examining it. Seems very unfair to totally disable the thing. I think he had a lot of nerve, it isn't his property to damage that way. If I was that customer, I would hold him responsible for damaging my property.
@@kingpins9 Sounds like you must have a man crush on ole Ted. LOL You don't know what the hell you are talking about! I've been an HVAC contractor for over 30 yrs. It was not necessary nor did he have the right to tear the vent pipe and transition apart the way he did. Its not his home and he is not paying for the repairs. He should have taken pictures and showed the homeowner what he found and what he recommends be done to properly and safely make the repairs. But he chose to rip open the duct transition and dismantle vent pipe leaving both the heat and the a/c more so compromised than before he arrived. That's not right, any way you spin it!
Omg I'm half way through my hvacr training and I myself can see a crap job that one is definitely unsafe. I hope there is a 2nd part with a correct safe install.
Definitely not an approved orientation for the furnace, the venting is just icing on the cake.
I've actually found them installed like that where they finally quit working because condensation at formed in the heat exchanger and pooled up enough to block it.
I think the outside unit said 2016 on it. Looks fairly new. Can't believe someone would touch that or install it that way. My grandfather is rolling in his grave.
It’s an old line set they probably had service valves but they couldn’t turn on or off so they soldered some Sauter on Schrader valves probably had a pretty low unit of an old singer
Feller says, "I AM NOT FIXIN' IT"................(but prior to this, tears out plenum and burner exhaust)....hahaha!
Wow thought I have seen some crazy but this takes the cake.
Need a little Jack of all Sprays on that door hinge on the van.
I know more crooked techs than good ones. Being honest has kept me busier than I can handle.
I'm not sure if the crooked ones just dont know or they know but do it on purpose.
Thanks for being one of the good guys.
Ya ever wonder if the actual hacker is watching this?
Biggest C.F. on the face of the earth!
Wow! No one that is licenced could ever walk from that and leave it powered up.
As an electrician I can tell you that there are twelve(12) NEC violations in the electrical half of that install, including 3 red flag violations that the fire department would declare the house unsafe to inhabit...
at 13:45 you ask what the thing on the AC compressor line is fore, my guess is to hook in to the line with test gages but i am no ac technician but that the only thing that makes sense to me about those lines
The guy that installed that on probably installs 110 outlets in showerts too.
How else am i gonna blow dry my hair?
Holy duct tape batman!
Wow pretty bad. That worm gear clamp connection made me LOL though
as a side note... holy crap they spent more money and time on duck and duct tape than they would have spent on the screws to secure all that together.....
Fire hazard as well, the electric and gas entering in the same hole ,especially with appliance connector is totally illegal, and a appliance cannot pass thru a wall of the furnace
Ted didn't know you serviced the International Space Station.
Man, that's almost as bad as it gets right there.
It looks like Horizon installed that heater !
That floppy transition looks like it's made cladding for insulation. That's unreal.
That was nasty looking smag in the end of that line, great job Steve
I see someone left the screws on the supply house counter.
The extra taps on the line set are probably from the tech that did the FD. I bet whoever did the line set to the condenser didn’t remove the Schraders and smoked them. The next guy said I ain’t touching it.
Damn there's mold and all types of organic growth in the supply plenum if I was the owner I would replace everything including grills and registers
Thing is, that furnace looks brand new!
It was about 4 years old if I remember right.
@@TedCookHVAC it was older than that by mfr date, but it looked like it just came out of the box. I don’t understand how no wires were fried or the cabinet scorched with the burners shooting down like that. I’m assuming you got the replacement job? I’m not seeing follow ups to some of these videos that are open ended situations.
Omg I need to know what happens!!
At this point I wouldn't even call this a hack job. I'd call it attempted murder!
Looks like another DIY job, wow.
That's got DIY written all over it
Guess they didn't have a screwgun that day😆
did the customer know who installed this furnace?
I wonder how many more have they installed like this one.
Can never have too many service ports!
Is there no mandatory inspection by the city when you install this kind of system where you live?
If they get a permit, yes. At least where I live guarantee case. Many jobs are done without a permit.
No drip leg on the gas supply either...
Hey ted that serial number doesn't go to that unit. That looks like a Payne unit and has a Comfortmaker inner door on it
The condensing unit is about the only thing that looks salvageable there. Everything else has gotta go!
Holly crap. That unit is supposed to be installed straight up.?
No words for that one.... wow
Who ever installed that should never again be allowed to even think about doing HVAC work.
What did the customer end up doing?
I am watching HVAC videos to help get an idea of what I'm going to school for which I do for the most part but I am like W.T.F is wrong with some people. That was a hack or shit job done buy someone trying to make a quick buck instead of the long term service that makes more money but I'm new going to school for HVAC what do I know. Have a great day!
I report the company that does work like that. It saves lives.
I would not touch that with a 10 foot pole !