as a mechanic and "part time" ac tech I find this offensive, but sadly I have to agree occasionally I have to fix things the guy before me has done wrong, especially my predecessor has done some half assed shit that would make you cringe even as a novice, but we don't charge the customer for that. but yeah....the shit they have been pulling in this video is unreal, I hope they got in touch with that company and got the money back
I do know a fair amount in the field, enough to know better than attempt an installation that's beyond my knowledge and just enough to spot the trapped drain line. And I know enough about electronics to know, "Fire, bad" for Frankenstein", "Water Bad" for electronics and connectors. Yeah, started my careers as an electronics technician. Moved on when circuits were no longer troubleshot, but simply replaced.
Should always be a 1 time thing. Next time they call , they should be greeted with the "I'm sorry, your business/home no longer fits within our service area".
You sound like the guy that charges more than most. But when you're finished, the customer doesn't need to call anyone again for a long time. I never mind paying extra for guys like you.
This is the guy that also said that you're not supposed to wire from the units on the roof but he still does it. He's no better than the installers that did this. He just happened to figure out this particular problem.
Some wording isn't recommended though he still does some wireing shouldn't do as aka nuteral to ground. He said he doesn't get paid enough. You set your own wages. Need to charge more. You get it right the first time. And no callbacks.
i just hate those guys that say they are the best and charge more than everybody else, but do a half ass job. its hard to find guys that charge more and do a really good job
Some people work for money, some people work for love, some people work for the satisfaction of doing things right. If you can do all three at the same time, you're all set
@@darrellharrington2301, you are mistaken. I work because I enjoy my job. If I didn't enjoy my job I wouldn't have been doing it for 29 years........BUT THEY KEEP PAYING ME MONEY, so I keep going back. By the way, I'll be 73 in 2 months. Yeah.......I like my job!
You are right, but there are times with complicated systems when you have shotgun the problem in the interest of time. Of course, you must first check to make sure there are no shorts in the wiring or the receptacle of the component. The power check was the right approach in either case.
I owned a repair plumbing service. What's really frustrating is to spend the time to correct other people's screw up, repair the problem and then have the customer complain about your bill, even though they had already paid double that from the other company. They never seem to direct there anger toward to people that caused the problem in the first place.
My housemate did the very same thing. I'm no plumber but I've followed one around for quite a bit of time. I understand that problems are RARELY what they seem on the surface, and usually the issue had been going LONG before the person ever took notice. She, and usually many others like you pointed out, they just don't understand. You've seen far more people like that given your profession than I ever have. People are already stressed, they just don't understand your job the way you do. If they did, they'd not be so angry. I understand though ☺️ It takes time and money and effort to do things properly ☺️
You know why I'm a handyman and I do nice work and often have to be brought in because they don't understand why something's messed up and I do my best not to bad mouth who it was however the gentleman that made the comment about how people are just fine paying for bad work and then when you give him a very kind bill because you understand the circumstances they give you a hard time!!!
@@aday1637 The real skill is advertising for paying customers and filtering out the bad payers that get past your adverts. I guess a lot of them watch You Tube to try and not pay as well. Social media gives the impression the world has gone to pot. Plenty of customers willing to pay for fast and professional service.
not only that but it give the rest of the industrie a bad rep. and if their shady work get property damaged or people hurt... at some point you have to warn people if not outright call some authority.
A bad tech blames the guy that was there previously and a really bad mechanic blames the tools. Put your head down, keep your mouth shut and fix it once and fix it right.
I have found where a walk in freezer had a huge ball of ice under the evaporater, and was told a lot of people worked on it . They couldn't find the problem. First thing I checked was the drain heater. It was bad also the drain line was not connected. Nor was it pitched correctly. After correcting these problems its been two years ago working just fine. Nice video great to watch.
Years ago I had a guy doing some work for me. He had a sign in his office. "shop rate $15/hr, $20 if you watch, $25 if you help. $40 if you tried to fix it yourself first."
And this is why I stopped offering refrigeration service. I stick to regular HVAC and do limited commercial work. It seemed every commercial call I got was to bail them out from the cheep guys mistake. Only to find out they still used the cheep guy and only used me for a bail out. I don’t need that frustration
@Henry Ford III what even is liberal arts? I am from Germany, I don't know if we even have this here! What about liberal arts makes one qualified for managing a company? We have a degree just for that roughly translated meaning school of the economy of companies
@@supremebohnenstange4102 basically means they spent time in college and never decided what they wanted to be, and was there so long they were forced to graduate with just the basics, (language/math/science/etc). ;0)
@Henry Ford III It's been going on for more than 40 years... Back when I was in grade school in the 70s, the teachers and counselors were pushing everyone who could fog a mirror to go for BAs in "Liberal Arts" I went for chemistry instead, and via a tortuous path ended up doing a mix of chemical and mechanical engineering - industrial ventilation. My career Plan F in the event of a major economic downturn has been to cash in my chips and buy into an HVAC company where I can make sure of having competent techs and getting things done right the first time...
If companies like that do shitty work, they deserve to be blasted publicly. I would not hesitate, not even a little. I would embarrass the hell out of them
I'm retired now, but I really used to _love_ challenges like this. It feels so good to go in blind, figure out the problem, and walk away knowing that you've fixed it properly. I really miss that feeling, but...I got too old for this shit, as the saying goes. Anyway, respect for knowing your job, and caring enough to do it right. 👍👍👍😉
I’ve been a commercial boiler tech for 30 years. Must say I love your technique of troubleshooting/ good job. Sometimes it is the simplest things that’ll solve the problem . Had a customer on a commercial boiler with a heat exchanger that put a valve on the drain pan that caused nothing but O2 sensor issues because the valve is not supposed to be there.
Like the saying goes " you get what you paid for" it never gets old. Awesome job, I kind of had an idea something was shorting out due to the ice up once you put put camera on it. Great job man!
So I do appliance repair. I know most of these components, but mine are smaller and more buried. Thankfully a refrigerator is designed so if you have a drip line clog (smaller tube) it floods the refrigerator, but saves the equipment. (Sadly occasionally at the expense of the hardwood) The bottom pan fills up, and you get a dribble of water out the door. Tends to indicate the problem much better than icing up the evap coils. Normally we get a call because "the icemaker is leaking even though we turned the water off". Always fun to explain to the customer that their leak was literally coming from thin air, rather than the icemaker. You earned a subscriber. And my sympathy goes out to you. I've been the 6th tech on the call before. It's satisfying when it's done, because you just proved you're better than at least 5 other techs, but you feel so bad for the customer, especially when you are charging them to undo something you know someone else charged them to do wrong. And you almost want to defend the other tech, because he represents your industry, but you really can't, because you're looking at his stupid.
One's integrity has a soft-spoken quality that is the greatest advertisement no money can buy. Your efforts and approach to this situation were outstanding. Not only do I enjoy your remarkable technical skills and vast knowledge, but your statesman-like chiding of the prior technicians (if we can call them that) who installed the unit and pretended to repair the unit was genuinely kind and generous. You are going places, Kiddo. I am 71-years-old and have been a general contractor in California since 1991 and I have never had a complaint filed against me. Honesty and one's best effort pays tremendous dividends. Yep, going places. Going to some really good places. Thanks.
I have a sick love for cleaning up terrible work like this. It’s what makes good service guys so valuable to begin with. It just blows my mind that people put up with these companies and don’t mind getting bled dry. They only call after the company gives up on their own work.
in all fairness, the previous company probably under pays and doesnt train their techs, a guy working 50-60 hours a week barely making it is not going give you quality service
@@change929 There is no excuse for doing crappy work. Just because you you think your boss is not paying you enough that doesn't mean you should take it out on the customer.
Electrician and HVACR tech here. I had a call of a dam RTU that kept tripping breakers only to see burnt wires and shattered dreams. The other techs just used masking tape to insulate their spliced wires 😭
It all comes down to. Your work speaks for itself..it is amazing how much work you find out there from people taking advantage of people.. Much respect to see someone takes pride and professional.. correctly fixing the dumb dumbs..
I worked many years in the automotive repair industry, it's amazing the stuff that I would get where I have to fix what another shop messed up. I can't believe what people are willing to put their name on.
I bet the company has been going around talking about how the equipment was junk and cheap and its been their fault the whole time. I've seen low budget equipment with a quality install go years without problems and high dollar equipment with horrible installs that are nothing but trouble.
Cars are the exact same way... a well-maintained Cheapo special will last forever ... while a brand new multi $100,000 car will die early on because nobody cares about it. I can think of one person on UA-cam who purchased a Range Rover for less than $4,000 because the technician before him destroyed the engine and then said and came in with catastrophic engine damage so they couldn't repair it. If technicians would own up to their mess-ups ... stuff would get repaired for what it's actually worth.
4 роки тому+5
@@DaveWithMS Well not the same exactly, most higher end cars have tons of tech and that tech and ''innovation'' is what breaks and costs a fortune, also some of those customers do skimp on services which on a more advanced system, can cause major problems. Your plain jane Corrola just do basic maintenance and an odd job now and then and drive it forever.
Don't buy a car built on a Monday or Friday. The thing is alot of people doing all different kind of jobs screw up and the next person who takes a look at it. Only goes off what the stated issue is and don't think of why it is happening. Then use shortcuts to get it working, thinking they knew what they did to make it work and not thinking about the next person. Which I think is unprofessional and can cause incidents.
Jim Grady Agree, it’s all about a quality install, and start-up. I’ve installed hundreds of KE2 equipment with nearly zero problems. With over twenty years in the trade, I’m still hungry and watch trade videos all the time. I recommend this along with a few other UA-cam channels to my younger techs. Keep up the good work!
Depends on how cheap you're going. I've installed customer supplied evaporators and condensing units with nitrogen purging and triple vac, but the copper on the evap was so thin and poorly coated that the whole thing was full pinhole leaks within 6 months from ant nest corrosion.
Electronics ALWAYS have magic smoke inside ... as long as it stays inside the component(s) are usually happy and do their job ... when they smoke that's there retirement time
I was an HVAC service tech for 10 years when I broke my back in 2010, it ended my career. As soon as I found this video my mind went bat s**t crazy trouble shooting. Miss it so much. Great job!
Great work young man. The other techs from the install and subsequently all the follow-up service calls company should be ashamed to call themselves refrigeration technicians. The owner of that establishment should also bare some responsibility as well for letting this fiasco continue. That old saying "Burn me once, shame on you, burn me twice, shame on me" is fitting here. All these problems would have been avoided IF the installers performed their jobs properly and the lead or supervisor inspected ALL aspects of that install ESPECIALLY the most obvious, that drain line. I've been in HVACR for 43 years, built and installed walk-in cooler/freezer systems many times. The 1st two that I ever did in my early twenties were a learning experience I will NEVER forget. I made a ton of mistakes, my takeaway from those mistakes was to ALWAYS triple check my work and have it inspected by a qualified inspector as well as my coworkers. My pride be damned. At least I learned and was open-minded to suggestions so I got the job done correctly in future jobs. Your knowledge is impressive and your work ethic is without parallel. Thanks for keeping the HVACR trade respectable.
Great work! Sometimes the problems lies in something simply like the drain pipe! And that’s pride in the work you do; neat, doing the tight thin and treating it like it’s yours.
Great to see someone work who actually knows what he is talking about. Looked to me before it was a major incident waiting to happen. Thank goodness for technicians like him.
I have been in the HVAC business for 30 years, I’m an independent contractor, one man business. I get a lot of calls like this. It’s nice to be the guy people know will figure it out. Often it seems that many businesses and technicians in the field are scared to say this is just not my area of expertise. When people call with a problem that I know there is someone better suited to handle that problem, I’m not scared to recommend them call the other company. They almost always call me first after that, because the trust that I won’t put them in a bad spot. Company’s really need to track employ performance better. Just because I have a universal HVAC license does not mean that I have the experience to work on a 100 tun centrifugal chiller in any efficient manner.
@@brandona4618 I believe that all vendors and manufacturers should stand behind the quality of their work and the assumption that they are skilled enough to perform that work to reasonable standards.
There maybe a confluence of factors. Getting to the next job, complacency, lack of knowledge, warranty vs service contract. In the back of my mind, I'm wondering if suing the former company is worth it. Sometimes just pounding the former service company on social media is more costly than a lawsuit..
Anyone can replace parts, get er running and walk away. It takes an actual tech to find the root cause by investigative method to ensure there is no recurrence. Well done sir.
I do a lot of electrical work on engine harnesses and wow!!! I FEEL THE FRUSTRATION! That cord you pulled out I use as an extension cord for my welder 😂. That type was used wrong but people do it. Glad you doing real solid work. Came across video random and glad I did. Im going to take some hvac classes and You are someone I can learn from with the honesty. Props man keep up the great work!
Great video !!! You have fantastic/excellent problem solving skills( You should have been a detective) You did a great job , found and solved the problem and made a repair that you were not there for !! You are a good man for not putting down the other company and you can go to bed knowing you did a great job and the customer is happy ! Keep up the good work and videos !
It’s refreshing to see someone take this much pride in their work. I’m learning a lot of great information from this channel! Keep up the great work sir! I’ve been in this feild for almost 5 years and haven’t come across any other tech with this level of expertise.
I had a similar experience, my classroom had a dedicated heat pump (one of fifty in the building) that never really worked 88 in the summer and 50 in the winter. After a year of techs coming every few weeks to tell us the unit was working correctly, I blew a different company’s tech’s mind when I took a sheet of paper and held it up to the air vent. Instead of blowing the paper away it was drawn to it. They had installed a top-down heat pump instead of a bottom-up unit reversing the returns and the vents. The returns had dampers to prevent back flow and closed venting the conditioned air into a make up air loop.
Love to see that at the end of the day, programming, electrical, and HVAC are all the same. 90% of your time is spent trying to figure out what the hell the previous guy was thinking. Let's hope that at least surgeons aren't like this.
I'm totally uneducated in HVAC. Your commentary as you discovered issues made it seem easy (I know there was a ton of work done without recording video) but in fact I know this work is tedious to say the least. Thanks for at least explaining things as you went (I still don't know Jack about HVAC but you made a great video!) Oh, those late night jobs will never end!
i'm a water treatment/softener engineer and the times I've had to rectify other peoples stupid mistakes is ridiculous. guaranteed the original installer/tech got good earnings from cocking it up. There is a difference between techs with passion and those who just look for the pay cheque.
Very true. This is how things are these days. Everyone is so evil and greedy you have to know how to do everything just to get a fair price and a fair job. And that only happens when the government doesn't do their job. Where there is no prophetic vision the people cast off restraint, but blessed is he who keeps the law. Proverbs 29:18
As an HVACR tech I feel for him. when you go behind someone else you have to undo everything they did just so you can find the original problem. sometimes the wiring is such a rats nest I have just pulled them all and then reinstalled per the diagram. Then at least I know that is eliminated. And remember rule #1. don't let the magic smoke out of the controls! :D
My brother had a similar situation even though it wasn't HVAC related. A few yrs ago his company was bidding on a job to rewire the alarm system in the Balto city jail. He took 1 look at the wiring overlays and rewires done over the years and walked out. They had 75% of the system bypassed with spaghetti wiring and when the wind blew strong enough the cell doors in an entire wing of the prison would open by themselves. It happened when he was there, of course they cancelled their bid and never went back. They didn't have the budget to replace the system, they were looking for another patch job.
As a licensed Plumber/fitter for 37yrs, I am impressed by your trouble shooting knowledge and your drive to find and correct the Multitude of problems! I would bet The other "technicians" couldn't even read the schematic.
What I found cool was you were able to hear him think. Many techs talk to themselves and figure out what to do next. Who better to put with yourself? Some people don't understand your approach. You are doing what law enforcement detectives do with a whiteboard in your head, with dialog.
The Health and Safety executive in the UK would have shut that company down and hauled their asses in court. That’s shocking wiring and failing just about every aspect of the 18th edition electrical wiring we abide by in the UK. 556 pages that need to be either memorised or have the book with you on every job to cover yourself. From memory this is abysmal, well done my friend, well done for preventing someone potentially getting a nasty shock. Again our three phase in the UK is normally 415vac and domestic mains power at 235vac. Eddy currents off poached neutrals and especially abusing PME. Also an old trick to bypass electric meter is to ditch the neutral and have the live running via the load to earth before the meter. Earths a different potentials all add up to a severe if not a fatal shock.
People wonder why I chose to retire early being a lead service tech. I was so glad someone else understands what goes on. My wish is beginners would watch this and 1. Learn to read the install manual before starting, 2. Realize you have to understand electricity to do a good job. 3. Drains cause so many nightmares, so do it right the first time. Yes even at EMC, Yahoo and Google server rooms this was happening early on. Let guys know a clogged drain cost a residential owner 7-10 K when their ceiling is damaged due to a drain sloppily installed. Glad I found your channel. I'll subscribe.
One thing I noticed is that some people that have installed the same type units tend to think that they know it all and don't go back to the install manual to double check that nothing has changed vs a previous install. The companies do make wiring and electrical changes that never get mentioned except in the install manuals. They could have installed 10 of the exact same units prior to a change made with no issues and then the next one they installed gave tons of problems. Sometimes it pays to compare the install manuals to older versions of the same model to make note of changes made. Then add to that some get used to the newer models and get a call to service an older model and run into the problems of thinking the older model needs serviced like the newer ones they are used to. Not all of the same models by the same manufacturer are the same year after year.
Amen! You found the root cause and made it ALL work correctly. My motto " One and done, no call backs on the same issues. " Well worth the watch even though I don't do HVAC /or R. 👏
I'm a mechanical engineer that designed custom walk-in chambers for 20 years. I know exactly your frustration. The things I've seen people do are unbelievable. I would typically get sent out on a service call after five or six people have made undocumented changes to the electrical systems and still problems persist. I've, stupidly in retrospect, been told I'm not allowed to shut chambers down and have worked on operating chambers with live 120 VAC/208 VAC/3-phase/60 Hz electrical systems. On one job I got shocked four times. I've seen obviously just plain dumb things done by technicians that defy common sense and yet they did it. I would typically be sent out after nobody else managed to fix the initial problem and usually created a much bigger nightmare for me. Looking back I must have been a glutton for punishment. But I always managed to fix the problem sometimes with a lot of cussing and disbelief of what others had done.
My brother went to work in the tech. and start up part of a major dehumidification manufacturer. Some of the stories he's told me, I mean these are $50K t0 $200K pieces of equipment. Had one installer call with all kinds of issues, when asked about pumping a vacuum and how many micron's! Oh we don't have time for that, we just give it quick pressure test and charge them up. Gee I wonder your having problem, brother couldn't make him understand why it was so important!!! He pushed on up to his boss's as to weather they were going void the warrantee's. A lot are weed growing factories some of these factories can have 10 to 30 units on the roof, crazy!
Never risk your life for a job, you don't know what devious trap is waiting for you. Assume every surface is live when you come to a new site and always cut the power before even opening boxes and enclosures!
I absolutely LOVE your content I find it extremely informative and the fact you cover about every step and comment and describe each step makes it easy to follow and learn about AC electrical 👍. I'm a certified senior master Ford technician, A1-A8 ASE, L1 Masters ASE, L2 Heavy Truck, and I always mentored new asset student techs, they school 3 months and work in shop 3 months for year or two throughout training, and the way you work the problem step by step from symptom, system, component(s) and the cause of the failure or issue is exactly how I approach everything in my field including the HVAC systems in vehicles, all I know about home and commercial style HVAC I am learning from you, I'm a recent subscriber and will remain a loyal follower and looking forward all future videos!!!! Thank you so much for what you do and how you do it, very proud work indeed, doing things the RIGHT way the first time will save you in the end 😉👍
Your end summary was good. Good work sorting that BTW. So long as customers keep taking the lowest quote at the onset you'll be set mate. Your marketing costs will be zero. Good work gets shared fast. Keep performing those credibility maintenance miracles!
I was at a friends house replacing bathroom sink faucets and tub/shower fixtures to a brushed nickel, when she says that her washing machine keeps running hot when she does a cold wash. She wasn’t sure if the washing machine wasn’t working right. I told her that I’m pretty sure the installers attached the water lines backwards. Sure enough that’s all it was. That’s not the same as you, but following somebody’s mistakes is both frustrating and amazing.
My last landlord installed the washing machine lines himself. Blue handle for hot water, red knob for the cold water. You'd be surprised how long it took me to figure that crap out!
My dad has a heater for his pool but every 5 minutes or so it would make a banging sound and shutdown, restart, and continue the same cycle. It did heat up the pool but it always seemed off and took awhile. After a couple years I decided to have a crack at it. I RTFM and within five minutes l found the problem. The "professional" installers who've been doing this for years and years put in a bypass valve between the input and output of the heater. The heater already has an internal bypass valve. You are only ever supposed to install an external bypass if your filter motor exceeds a certain amount of HP which this was well under. As soon as we piped the external bypass out and did a straight in and out it's been running like clockwork.
The last plumber in my house did the following . . Lifted bathroom sink, lost his balance , fell with sink striking bath tube.. chipped bath tube.... continuing his fall the man fell against the toilet. It was knocked loose and leaked at the drain. The sink faucet was six years old and rusted so it leaked from the underside! Continuing on, i didnt dare call the three hundred dollar plumber again, pulled the commode , discovered the $13,000.00 bath room renovation six years ago left one side of the commode flange hanging in mid air! It anchored on one side only ! No permits often equells shoddy work.! My wife did the bath renovation on her own and used a big box store who provided that $150.00 fuxture from China and the contractir who got squeezed out of any profit in this job .
Thank you for being professional. Unfortunately it seems to be a thing of the past nowadays of ppl taking pride in their work. Me and you are just alike and I too get to fix tons of other ppls crap in my line of work. It makes me so mad when I go out of my way to make sure something is as good as it can be while I'm charging the same or less than other companies that are just butchering stuff.
OMG what a cob job i hope you reached out to the licensing division about the other company the wiring they did was borderline violation depending on the state. no matter any competent installer should have seen what you saw. i used to do hvac and mac certified and my dad was master electrician hats off to you for biting tongue but good grief what a mess. i'd like to know if they ever called you back about a detailed break down on problems so they could go back for reimbursement from other company, because many states have not implemented "lemon laws" against lic hvac and electrical contractors for shoddy workmanship
Even though I cannot follow all the exact steps, this is a very fascinating video. I love the troubleshooting process. As a computer technician, I go through the same sort of thought process. Eliminate what you can until you find the issue. Love it.
Great Video!!. Im not surprised one little bit. I have been fixing freezers since age 12 and seen so much shoddy work. The worst are big companies. Still dont like to have so much electronics in a freezing wet spot. Guarantees breakdowns and ends up costing asset owners shit tons of money far exceeding the power saved by miles. You fix everything in one hit which is excellent. Your customers are lucky they have you fix their stuff
Have had many similar cases with furnaces and other appliances. More techs need to start with the basics,like is the drain pitched correctly. Amazing how such a simple thing can set off such a chain of problems. Nice catch!
You did it correctly, it’s satisfying sus it out but extremely frustrating to deal with people that don’t want to do it correctly to begin with. Good job bud
Thanks to UA-cam for showing this in India at 4 A.M. while my whole day watch history was related to News and only Arduino as the tech during last few days 😂😂😂😂
I do hvac and I run into half ass jobs like this all the time. Good job man for fixing it right I hope you got compensated for work not many people are willing to do.
18:10 - SO (600v, oil resistant) and SJO (300v “J”stands for Junior, oil resistant) are portable power cord designations that refer to the outer jacket material. Either type is possible in this application, although SOOW or SJOOW would be better suited here since the “W” stands for water resistant. You have SJOOW in your hand. That’s 300v (J), outer (jacket) and inner (conductors) oil resistant insulation, and water resistant (W).
I admire your ability to not instantly reset the breaker and see what happens.
So basically they were charging to fix problems THEY caused. Sounds like a car dealership.
sounds more like the government.
No, they were charging to fix the symptoms of the problems they caused without fixing the actual problems.
Sounds like a lawsuit to me to be honest.
as a mechanic and "part time" ac tech I find this offensive, but sadly I have to agree
occasionally I have to fix things the guy before me has done wrong, especially my predecessor has done some half assed shit that would make you cringe even as a novice, but we don't charge the customer for that.
but yeah....the shit they have been pulling in this video is unreal, I hope they got in touch with that company and got the money back
Nathan West we should get pd more every time we have to un-F some bozo’s work. It takes time away from the actual repair, so yeh, more $
Funny how I don't know nothing about what he's talking about but stayed and watched the whole video... good video
Me too.
Same lol
😁👍😂😂
I do know a fair amount in the field, enough to know better than attempt an installation that's beyond my knowledge and just enough to spot the trapped drain line.
And I know enough about electronics to know, "Fire, bad" for Frankenstein", "Water Bad" for electronics and connectors.
Yeah, started my careers as an electronics technician. Moved on when circuits were no longer troubleshot, but simply replaced.
Not a Damn clue but it was definitely interesting
I’m a retired hvac tech of ten years, but this guy is in another zone, really smart and great job man!
Should always be a 1 time thing. Next time they call , they should be greeted with the "I'm sorry, your business/home no longer fits within our service area".
He loves his work! That's the only difference between him and .............. THEM ...............LOL!!!!
10 years? At what age did you get into the industry?
You sound like the guy that charges more than most. But when you're finished, the customer doesn't need to call anyone again for a long time. I never mind paying extra for guys like you.
This is the guy that also said that you're not supposed to wire from the units on the roof but he still does it. He's no better than the installers that did this. He just happened to figure out this particular problem.
Some wording isn't recommended though he still does some wireing shouldn't do as aka nuteral to ground. He said he doesn't get paid enough. You set your own wages. Need to charge more. You get it right the first time. And no callbacks.
i just hate those guys that say they are the best and charge more than everybody else, but do a half ass job. its hard to find guys that charge more and do a really good job
@@jaysidhu3313 and when you get the quote for the job you feel faint and get 3 other quotes and hire the cheapest
@@jaysidhu3313 I am a Master Mudder. I charge LESS and STILL dont get hired . why.
Some people work for money, some people work for love, some people work for the satisfaction of doing things right. If you can do all three at the same time, you're all set
So true.
one reply no more
Great job!!!.... I got frustrated myself as u dealt with the domino effect. I need to be on ur team. Impressed.
Well I doubt anyone works because they want too!
@@darrellharrington2301, you are mistaken. I work because I enjoy my job. If I didn't enjoy my job I wouldn't have been doing it for 29 years........BUT THEY KEEP PAYING ME MONEY, so I keep going back. By the way, I'll be 73 in 2 months. Yeah.......I like my job!
You are the difference between a guy who actually knows what he’s doing and a guy that just throws parts at the problem. Good job.
Yeah, it's hell living in a world of idiots
You are right, but there are times with complicated systems when you have shotgun the problem in the interest of time. Of course, you must first check to make sure there are no shorts in the wiring or the receptacle of the component. The power check was the right approach in either case.
I owned a repair plumbing service. What's really frustrating is to spend the time to correct other people's screw up, repair the problem and then have the customer complain about your bill, even though they had already paid double that from the other company. They never seem to direct there anger toward to people that caused the problem in the first place.
My housemate did the very same thing. I'm no plumber but I've followed one around for quite a bit of time. I understand that problems are RARELY what they seem on the surface, and usually the issue had been going LONG before the person ever took notice. She, and usually many others like you pointed out, they just don't understand. You've seen far more people like that given your profession than I ever have. People are already stressed, they just don't understand your job the way you do. If they did, they'd not be so angry. I understand though ☺️ It takes time and money and effort to do things properly ☺️
So true.
You know why I'm a handyman and I do nice work and often have to be brought in because they don't understand why something's messed up and I do my best not to bad mouth who it was however the gentleman that made the comment about how people are just fine paying for bad work and then when you give him a very kind bill because you understand the circumstances they give you a hard time!!!
In over 50 years in business I've never had a customer complain about paying me when I corrected issues. You sure you aren't a 'keyboard warrior'?
@@aday1637 The real skill is advertising for paying customers and filtering out the bad payers that get past your adverts. I guess a lot of them watch You Tube to try and not pay as well. Social media gives the impression the world has gone to pot. Plenty of customers willing to pay for fast and professional service.
I hope you reported that company to the proper authorities.
Great video. Great electro-mechanical troubleshooting skills. Beast
Calling you and dropping the other company is the best move they made.
You never want to talk smack about another crew, but at some point you gotta just say “Eff these MF’ers”
hahaha at some point right! your like" f these guys man!!! then you go get parts. haha
One of the essential rules of troubleshooting: you cannot trust the last guy, he was unable to permanently fix the problem
@@glitter_fart fkn genius! 😂
not only that but it give the rest of the industrie a bad rep. and if their shady work get property damaged or people hurt... at some point you have to warn people if not outright call some authority.
A bad tech blames the guy that was there previously and a really bad mechanic blames the tools. Put your head down, keep your mouth shut and fix it once and fix it right.
“It is 8:34 on Friday night” - as a HVAC tech if anyone asks me what it’s like in my line of work I’ll just send them a link to this video 😂
I have found where a walk in freezer had a huge ball of ice under the evaporater, and was told a lot of people worked on it . They couldn't find the problem. First thing I checked was the drain heater. It was bad also the drain line was not connected. Nor was it pitched correctly. After correcting these problems its been two years ago working just fine. Nice video great to watch.
Well done, our industry needs more conscientious people like you.
Years ago I had a guy doing some work for me. He had a sign in his office. "shop rate $15/hr, $20 if you watch, $25 if you help. $40 if you tried to fix it yourself first."
Thats a popular saying in any repair industry
I've seen that sign in many places
Gunsmiths often refer to the GIB = gun in bag (box) of parts surcharge.
Good motorcycle mechanics have that posted in their shop.
@Robert Slackware well, if you know how to do it, do it, but if you hire someone else, trust them and leave them alone...common courtesy
You can't go wrong being a honest hard working dude
In the modern world hardworking and honest are two strikes .
Sounds like there is a lot more money in being lazy and dishonest though.
@@drumedorable is only fans for you? Join now and find out.
Amen!
And this is why I stopped offering refrigeration service. I stick to regular HVAC and do limited commercial work. It seemed every commercial call I got was to bail them out from the cheep guys mistake. Only to find out they still used the cheep guy and only used me for a bail out. I don’t need that frustration
@Henry Ford III what even is liberal arts? I am from Germany, I don't know if we even have this here! What about liberal arts makes one qualified for managing a company? We have a degree just for that roughly translated meaning school of the economy of companies
@@supremebohnenstange4102 basically means they spent time in college and never decided what they wanted to be, and was there so long they were forced to graduate with just the basics, (language/math/science/etc). ;0)
You need to bill big for bailouts...
@@supremebohnenstange4102 It's called a "waste of time and your parents' money".
@Henry Ford III It's been going on for more than 40 years... Back when I was in grade school in the 70s, the teachers and counselors were pushing everyone who could fog a mirror to go for BAs in "Liberal Arts"
I went for chemistry instead, and via a tortuous path ended up doing a mix of chemical and mechanical engineering - industrial ventilation.
My career Plan F in the event of a major economic downturn has been to cash in my chips and buy into an HVAC company where I can make sure of having competent techs and getting things done right the first time...
If companies like that do shitty work, they deserve to be blasted publicly. I would not hesitate, not even a little. I would embarrass the hell out of them
I'm retired now, but I really used to _love_ challenges like this. It feels so good to go in blind, figure out the problem, and walk away knowing that you've fixed it properly. I really miss that feeling, but...I got too old for this shit, as the saying goes. Anyway, respect for knowing your job, and caring enough to do it right. 👍👍👍😉
When I saw the huge buildup of ice, first thing I thought is clogged drain. Didn't even occur to me someone would install a drain at the wrong angle.
Brings back memories. Part changers amongst us. No callbacks and honesty. Good job 👍
I’ve been a commercial boiler tech for 30 years. Must say I love your technique of troubleshooting/ good job. Sometimes it is the simplest things that’ll solve the problem . Had a customer on a commercial boiler with a heat exchanger that put a valve on the drain pan that caused nothing but O2 sensor issues because the valve is not supposed to be there.
Thanks for the nice words bud!!
I'm just a PM Tech for right now, but your videos help me all the time. Thanks man keep up the great videos!
Like the saying goes " you get what you paid for" it never gets old. Awesome job, I kind of had an idea something was shorting out due to the ice up once you put put camera on it. Great job man!
I like how you say "potentially made a mistake on the install"
Clearly that is a complete balls up from start to finish!
What a nightmare. If I was the owner I would be freaking out cuz I know that is a major expense to fix it. This guy is on top of everything.
What a nightmare! Your a savior to that customer. Great video 👍
So I do appliance repair. I know most of these components, but mine are smaller and more buried.
Thankfully a refrigerator is designed so if you have a drip line clog (smaller tube) it floods the refrigerator, but saves the equipment. (Sadly occasionally at the expense of the hardwood) The bottom pan fills up, and you get a dribble of water out the door. Tends to indicate the problem much better than icing up the evap coils.
Normally we get a call because "the icemaker is leaking even though we turned the water off".
Always fun to explain to the customer that their leak was literally coming from thin air, rather than the icemaker.
You earned a subscriber. And my sympathy goes out to you. I've been the 6th tech on the call before. It's satisfying when it's done, because you just proved you're better than at least 5 other techs, but you feel so bad for the customer, especially when you are charging them to undo something you know someone else charged them to do wrong. And you almost want to defend the other tech, because he represents your industry, but you really can't, because you're looking at his stupid.
One's integrity has a soft-spoken quality that is the greatest advertisement no money can buy. Your efforts and approach to this situation were outstanding. Not only do I enjoy your remarkable technical skills and vast knowledge, but your statesman-like chiding of the prior technicians (if we can call them that) who installed the unit and pretended to repair the unit was genuinely kind and generous. You are going places, Kiddo. I am 71-years-old and have been a general contractor in California since 1991 and I have never had a complaint filed against me. Honesty and one's best effort pays tremendous dividends. Yep, going places. Going to some really good places. Thanks.
Happy to know people like this guy are still out there . stay strong with your morals young man. Danny Woodliff
I have a sick love for cleaning up terrible work like this. It’s what makes good service guys so valuable to begin with. It just blows my mind that people put up with these companies and don’t mind getting bled dry. They only call after the company gives up on their own work.
So satisfying to watch someone who knows what they're doing cleaning up after someone who didn't.
in all fairness, the previous company probably under pays and doesnt train their techs, a guy working 50-60 hours a week barely making it is not going give you quality service
@@change929 There is no excuse for doing crappy work. Just because you you think your boss is not paying you enough that doesn't mean you should take it out on the customer.
It is good to know there are good service techs like you around that know the correct way to fix things.
Chumps that charge for call backs or warranties should get out of our trade.
Electrician and HVACR tech here. I had a call of a dam RTU that kept tripping breakers only to see burnt wires and shattered dreams. The other techs just used masking tape to insulate their spliced wires 😭
It all comes down to.
Your work speaks for itself..it is amazing how much work you find out there from people taking advantage of people..
Much respect to see someone takes pride and professional.. correctly fixing the dumb dumbs..
I worked many years in the automotive repair industry, it's amazing the stuff that I would get where I have to fix what another shop messed up. I can't believe what people are willing to put their name on.
Thank you! You are the reason I am into HVAC now. My very first video I watched was one with a refridgeration rack
Don't need a minute's worth of HVAC experience to recognize that a drain line should be pitched down and not up.
Great job man. Great job. Always hard to figure out someone else's work. Reading the invoices was very smart.
I bet the company has been going around talking about how the equipment was junk and cheap and its been their fault the whole time. I've seen low budget equipment with a quality install go years without problems and high dollar equipment with horrible installs that are nothing but trouble.
Cars are the exact same way... a well-maintained Cheapo special will last forever ... while a brand new multi $100,000 car will die early on because nobody cares about it. I can think of one person on UA-cam who purchased a Range Rover for less than $4,000 because the technician before him destroyed the engine and then said and came in with catastrophic engine damage so they couldn't repair it.
If technicians would own up to their mess-ups ... stuff would get repaired for what it's actually worth.
@@DaveWithMS Well not the same exactly, most higher end cars have tons of tech and that tech and ''innovation'' is what breaks and costs a fortune, also some of those customers do skimp on services which on a more advanced system, can cause major problems. Your plain jane Corrola just do basic maintenance and an odd job now and then and drive it forever.
Don't buy a car built on a Monday or Friday. The thing is alot of people doing all different kind of jobs screw up and the next person who takes a look at it. Only goes off what the stated issue is and don't think of why it is happening. Then use shortcuts to get it working, thinking they knew what they did to make it work and not thinking about the next person. Which I think is unprofessional and can cause incidents.
Jim Grady Agree, it’s all about a quality install, and start-up. I’ve installed hundreds of KE2 equipment with nearly zero problems. With over twenty years in the trade, I’m still hungry and watch trade videos all the time. I recommend this along with a few other UA-cam channels to my younger techs. Keep up the good work!
Depends on how cheap you're going. I've installed customer supplied evaporators and condensing units with nitrogen purging and triple vac, but the copper on the evap was so thin and poorly coated that the whole thing was full pinhole leaks within 6 months from ant nest corrosion.
"ok, nothing blew up, so that's a plus" HAHAHAHA I mean that goes for anything!
Unless your a demolition tech, in which case that's bad.
Nathan630pm, Fixing somebody else's fuck ups is often full of dangerous surprises, when it comes to 208V 3 phase power, and wet environments.
@@Lumby1 haha yeah I totally get that! I just loved the comment haha
Electronics ALWAYS have magic smoke inside ... as long as it stays inside the component(s) are usually happy and do their job ... when they smoke that's there retirement time
I was in the automotive business for 12+ years and I’ve said the same exact words when starting a replacement engine lol
I was an HVAC service tech for 10 years when I broke my back in 2010, it ended my career. As soon as I found this video my mind went bat s**t crazy trouble shooting. Miss it so much. Great job!
Great work young man. The other techs from the install and subsequently all the follow-up service calls company should be ashamed to call themselves refrigeration technicians. The owner of that establishment should also bare some responsibility as well for letting this fiasco continue. That old saying "Burn me once, shame on you, burn me twice, shame on me" is fitting here. All these problems would have been avoided IF the installers performed their jobs properly and the lead or supervisor inspected ALL aspects of that install ESPECIALLY the most obvious, that drain line. I've been in HVACR for 43 years, built and installed walk-in cooler/freezer systems many times. The 1st two that I ever did in my early twenties were a learning experience I will NEVER forget. I made a ton of mistakes, my takeaway from those mistakes was to ALWAYS triple check my work and have it inspected by a qualified inspector as well as my coworkers. My pride be damned. At least I learned and was open-minded to suggestions so I got the job done correctly in future jobs. Your knowledge is impressive and your work ethic is without parallel. Thanks for keeping the HVACR trade respectable.
Great work! Sometimes the problems lies in something simply like the drain pipe! And that’s pride in the work you do; neat, doing the tight thin and treating it like it’s yours.
Great video to see someone working and nowing what they are doing.
Great to see someone work who actually knows what he is talking about. Looked to me before it was a major incident waiting to happen. Thank goodness for technicians like him.
I don't do refrigeration but I've been an electrician for 30 years. I know, all too well what it's like walking into a nightmare. Good job!
I have been in the HVAC business for 30 years, I’m an independent contractor, one man business. I get a lot of calls like this. It’s nice to be the guy people know will figure it out. Often it seems that many businesses and technicians in the field are scared to say this is just not my area of expertise. When people call with a problem that I know there is someone better suited to handle that problem, I’m not scared to recommend them call the other company. They almost always call me first after that, because the trust that I won’t put them in a bad spot.
Company’s really need to track employ performance better. Just because I have a universal HVAC license does not mean that I have the experience to work on a 100 tun centrifugal chiller in any efficient manner.
word.
A man must know his limitations
The customer needs to take YOUR findings and sue the other company for that money back.
Alot of time. Not worth trouble
Sue them!
They hired them. their at fault. Liberal nonsense of liability like this needs to be gone. Do your research.
@@brandona4618 I believe that all vendors and manufacturers should stand behind the quality of their work and the assumption that they are skilled enough to perform that work to reasonable standards.
@@jeromeduffy9270 For thousands of dollars, wasted time, aggravation and principle, it IS worth the trouble.
I was a maintenance electrician for decades and I know how you feel when you walk into a situation like that. Good work troubleshooting!
The Mike Holmes of refrigeration right here. ''Make It Right.''
The other company needs to be STOP! before they get someone hurt or killed.
Welcome to Hvac . Nightmares are a daily occurrence. Nice job. Always make it worth your time.
It’s actually nice when you show starting the evaporator up.
Your relaxed enough on these jobs to see the smallest detail... a stressed out tech gonna miss all kinds of stuff
Chris Moore *You're
Or one that just don't have the competence.
There maybe a confluence of factors. Getting to the next job, complacency, lack of knowledge, warranty vs service contract.
In the back of my mind, I'm wondering if suing the former company is worth it. Sometimes just pounding the former service company on social media is more costly than a lawsuit..
You’re a professional period you didn’t just do a band-aid job you went the distance and found the problem painstaking. Great job 👍👍
Agreed
Anyone can replace parts, get er running and walk away. It takes an actual tech to find the root cause by investigative method to ensure there is no recurrence. Well done sir.
w o r d ! . . .
I have zero experience on this subject matter but it’s fascinating to watch. Keep it up 👍🏻
I do a lot of electrical work on engine harnesses and wow!!! I FEEL THE FRUSTRATION! That cord you pulled out I use as an extension cord for my welder 😂. That type was used wrong but people do it. Glad you doing real solid work. Came across video random and glad I did. Im going to take some hvac classes and You are someone I can learn from with the honesty. Props man keep up the great work!
Great video !!! You have fantastic/excellent problem solving skills( You should have been a detective) You did a great job , found and solved the problem and made a repair that you were not there for !! You are a good man for not putting down the other company and you can go to bed knowing you did a great job and the customer is happy ! Keep up the good work and videos !
It’s refreshing to see someone take this much pride in their work. I’m learning a lot of great information from this channel! Keep up the great work sir! I’ve been in this feild for almost 5 years and haven’t come across any other tech with this level of expertise.
I had a similar experience, my classroom had a dedicated heat pump (one of fifty in the building) that never really worked 88 in the summer and 50 in the winter. After a year of techs coming every few weeks to tell us the unit was working correctly, I blew a different company’s tech’s mind when I took a sheet of paper and held it up to the air vent. Instead of blowing the paper away it was drawn to it. They had installed a top-down heat pump instead of a bottom-up unit reversing the returns and the vents. The returns had dampers to prevent back flow and closed venting the conditioned air into a make up air loop.
Great perseverance on that job. You're a true professional, breaking it down and fixing ALL problems not just patching it up until the next callback.
Love to see that at the end of the day, programming, electrical, and HVAC are all the same. 90% of your time is spent trying to figure out what the hell the previous guy was thinking.
Let's hope that at least surgeons aren't like this.
I'm totally uneducated in HVAC. Your commentary as you discovered issues made it seem easy (I know there was a ton of work done without recording video) but in fact I know this work is tedious to say the least. Thanks for at least explaining things as you went (I still don't know Jack about HVAC but you made a great video!) Oh, those late night jobs will never end!
The patience this guy has is incredible 👌🏼 his a super tech 💪🏼
i'm a water treatment/softener engineer and the times I've had to rectify other peoples stupid mistakes is ridiculous.
guaranteed the original installer/tech got good earnings from cocking it up.
There is a difference between techs with passion and those who just look for the pay cheque.
This video tell me Google's is definitely listening to my conversations
Good job for fixing it bro only an expert can go behind somebody and undo everything and make things right.
Love these jobs. Makes you feel good when you walk away knowing it’s done right. And you are the champ
This sounds like an episode of HVAC Law and order special victims unit.
Dun dun
Wouldn't it just be Law *&* Order HVACU?
Very true. This is how things are these days. Everyone is so evil and greedy you have to know how to do everything just to get a fair price and a fair job. And that only happens when the government doesn't do their job.
Where there is no prophetic vision the people cast off restraint, but blessed is he who keeps the law.
Proverbs 29:18
**Special vacuums unit**
Been doing this for 41+ noughdoubt .......amatures at play ... Bill bill bill
As an HVACR tech I feel for him. when you go behind someone else you have to undo everything they did just so you can find the original problem. sometimes the wiring is such a rats nest I have just pulled them all and then reinstalled per the diagram. Then at least I know that is eliminated. And remember rule #1. don't let the magic smoke out of the controls! :D
Great video Chris. over one million views that's great. You are a good example what a technician meaning.
Congratulation! you done a great job.
My brother had a similar situation even though it wasn't HVAC related. A few yrs ago his company was bidding on a job to rewire the alarm system in the Balto city jail. He took 1 look at the wiring overlays and rewires done over the years and walked out. They had 75% of the system bypassed with spaghetti wiring and when the wind blew strong enough the cell doors in an entire wing of the prison would open by themselves. It happened when he was there, of course they cancelled their bid and never went back. They didn't have the budget to replace the system, they were looking for another patch job.
He should have contacted me. I know a welder that would gladly weld the cell doors shut and stay within the budget.
Glad that you have the skillset and the honest work ethic that you Do. Great work, awesome work
As a licensed Plumber/fitter for 37yrs, I am impressed by your trouble shooting knowledge and your drive to find and correct the
Multitude of problems! I would bet
The other "technicians" couldn't even read the schematic.
What I found cool was you were able to hear him think. Many techs talk to themselves and figure out what to do next. Who better to put with yourself? Some people don't understand your approach. You are doing what law enforcement detectives do with a whiteboard in your head, with dialog.
The Health and Safety executive in the UK would have shut that company down and hauled their asses in court. That’s shocking wiring and failing just about every aspect of the 18th edition electrical wiring we abide by in the UK. 556 pages that need to be either memorised or have the book with you on every job to cover yourself. From memory this is abysmal, well done my friend, well done for preventing someone potentially getting a nasty shock. Again our three phase in the UK is normally 415vac and domestic mains power at 235vac. Eddy currents off poached neutrals and especially abusing PME. Also an old trick to bypass electric meter is to ditch the neutral and have the live running via the load to earth before the meter. Earths a different potentials all add up to a severe if not a fatal shock.
It the same way in houses. The drain is the most important part of the AC system!
People wonder why I chose to retire early being a lead service tech. I was so glad someone else understands what goes on. My wish is beginners would watch this and 1. Learn to read the install manual before starting, 2. Realize you have to understand electricity to do a good job. 3. Drains cause so many nightmares, so do it right the first time. Yes even at EMC, Yahoo and Google server rooms this was happening early on. Let guys know a clogged drain cost a residential owner 7-10 K when their ceiling is damaged due to a drain sloppily installed. Glad I found your channel. I'll subscribe.
Electricity, water, and air (or any fluid) all have similar characteristics, except gravity in liquids
One thing I noticed is that some people that have installed the same type units tend to think that they know it all and don't go back to the install manual to double check that nothing has changed vs a previous install. The companies do make wiring and electrical changes that never get mentioned except in the install manuals. They could have installed 10 of the exact same units prior to a change made with no issues and then the next one they installed gave tons of problems.
Sometimes it pays to compare the install manuals to older versions of the same model to make note of changes made. Then add to that some get used to the newer models and get a call to service an older model and run into the problems of thinking the older model needs serviced like the newer ones they are used to. Not all of the same models by the same manufacturer are the same year after year.
Read the instructions?! But my uncle always called that the "Idiot Sheet"
Amen! You found the root cause and made it ALL work correctly. My motto
" One and done, no call backs on the same issues. "
Well worth the watch even though I don't do HVAC /or R. 👏
I'm a mechanical engineer that designed custom walk-in chambers for 20 years. I know exactly your frustration. The things I've seen people do are unbelievable. I would typically get sent out on a service call after five or six people have made undocumented changes to the electrical systems and still problems persist. I've, stupidly in retrospect, been told I'm not allowed to shut chambers down and have worked on operating chambers with live 120 VAC/208 VAC/3-phase/60 Hz electrical systems. On one job I got shocked four times. I've seen obviously just plain dumb things done by technicians that defy common sense and yet they did it. I would typically be sent out after nobody else managed to fix the initial problem and usually created a much bigger nightmare for me. Looking back I must have been a glutton for punishment. But I always managed to fix the problem sometimes with a lot of cussing and disbelief of what others had done.
Correction: "I was a service tech with a mechanical engineering background" .... and must have been a glutton for punishment.
My brother went to work in the tech. and start up part of a major dehumidification manufacturer. Some of the stories he's told me, I mean these are $50K t0 $200K pieces of equipment. Had one installer call with all kinds of issues, when asked about pumping a vacuum and how many micron's! Oh we don't have time for that, we just give it quick pressure test and charge them up. Gee I wonder your having problem, brother couldn't make him understand why it was so important!!! He pushed on up to his boss's as to weather they were going void the warrantee's. A lot are weed growing factories some of these factories can have 10 to 30 units on the roof, crazy!
Do you drink
Never risk your life for a job, you don't know what devious trap is waiting for you. Assume every surface is live when you come to a new site and always cut the power before even opening boxes and enclosures!
I absolutely LOVE your content I find it extremely informative and the fact you cover about every step and comment and describe each step makes it easy to follow and learn about AC electrical 👍. I'm a certified senior master Ford technician, A1-A8 ASE, L1 Masters ASE, L2 Heavy Truck, and I always mentored new asset student techs, they school 3 months and work in shop 3 months for year or two throughout training, and the way you work the problem step by step from symptom, system, component(s) and the cause of the failure or issue is exactly how I approach everything in my field including the HVAC systems in vehicles, all I know about home and commercial style HVAC I am learning from you, I'm a recent subscriber and will remain a loyal follower and looking forward all future videos!!!! Thank you so much for what you do and how you do it, very proud work indeed, doing things the RIGHT way the first time will save you in the end 😉👍
Your end summary was good.
Good work sorting that BTW.
So long as customers keep taking the lowest quote at the onset you'll be set mate.
Your marketing costs will be zero. Good work gets shared fast.
Keep performing those credibility maintenance miracles!
I was at a friends house replacing bathroom sink faucets and tub/shower fixtures to a brushed nickel, when she says that her washing machine keeps running hot when she does a cold wash. She wasn’t sure if the washing machine wasn’t working right. I told her that I’m pretty sure the installers attached the water lines backwards. Sure enough that’s all it was.
That’s not the same as you, but following somebody’s mistakes is both frustrating and amazing.
My last landlord installed the washing machine lines himself. Blue handle for hot water, red knob for the cold water. You'd be surprised how long it took me to figure that crap out!
My dad has a heater for his pool but every 5 minutes or so it would make a banging sound and shutdown, restart, and continue the same cycle. It did heat up the pool but it always seemed off and took awhile. After a couple years I decided to have a crack at it. I RTFM and within five minutes l found the problem. The "professional" installers who've been doing this for years and years put in a bypass valve between the input and output of the heater. The heater already has an internal bypass valve. You are only ever supposed to install an external bypass if your filter motor exceeds a certain amount of HP which this was well under. As soon as we piped the external bypass out and did a straight in and out it's been running like clockwork.
The last plumber in my house did the following . . Lifted bathroom sink, lost his balance , fell with sink striking bath tube.. chipped bath tube.... continuing his fall the man fell against the toilet. It was knocked loose and leaked at the drain. The sink faucet was six years old and rusted so it leaked from the underside!
Continuing on, i didnt dare call the three hundred dollar plumber again, pulled the commode , discovered the $13,000.00 bath room renovation six years ago left one side of the commode flange hanging in mid air! It anchored on one side only !
No permits often equells shoddy work.!
My wife did the bath renovation on her own and used a big box store who provided that $150.00 fuxture from China and the contractir who got squeezed out of any profit in this job .
That's not a bìģgy.
Just swap the hoses dog.
Love how you edit this as a whole episode without having to wait for the resolution.
Does this mean you will provide them with future maintenance?
Thank you for being professional. Unfortunately it seems to be a thing of the past nowadays of ppl taking pride in their work. Me and you are just alike and I too get to fix tons of other ppls crap in my line of work. It makes me so mad when I go out of my way to make sure something is as good as it can be while I'm charging the same or less than other companies that are just butchering stuff.
Doing it right the first time will have the clients calling you back because you are honest and reliable.
OMG what a cob job i hope you reached out to the licensing division about the other company the wiring they did was borderline violation depending on the state. no matter any competent installer should have seen what you saw. i used to do hvac and mac certified and my dad was master electrician hats off to you for biting tongue but good grief what a mess. i'd like to know if they ever called you back about a detailed break down on problems so they could go back for reimbursement from other company, because many states have not implemented "lemon laws" against lic hvac and electrical contractors for shoddy workmanship
It's good to see someone on the job who knows what they're doing and knows it well!
"This thing is full of water,,,,,,, I wonder where the shorts at? " Very funny.
And what did we learn today kids...
Cheap installs are REALLY expensive.
Even though I cannot follow all the exact steps, this is a very fascinating video. I love the troubleshooting process. As a computer technician, I go through the same sort of thought process. Eliminate what you can until you find the issue. Love it.
When you aint doin right you aint doin it at all, thank god for skilled people like you dude
Great Video!!. Im not surprised one little bit. I have been fixing freezers since age 12 and seen so much shoddy work. The worst are big companies. Still dont like to have so much electronics in a freezing wet spot. Guarantees breakdowns and ends up costing asset owners shit tons of money far exceeding the power saved by miles. You fix everything in one hit which is excellent. Your customers are lucky they have you fix their stuff
Have had many similar cases with furnaces and other appliances. More techs need to start with the basics,like is the drain pitched correctly. Amazing how such a simple thing can set off such a chain of problems. Nice catch!
You did it correctly, it’s satisfying sus it out but extremely frustrating to deal with people that don’t want to do it correctly to begin with. Good job bud
UA-cam logarithm is one of the most mysterious things in life..
*algorithm
Logarithm... you trolling?
Thanks to UA-cam for showing this in India at 4 A.M. while my whole day watch history was related to News and only Arduino as the tech during last few days 😂😂😂😂
I do hvac and I run into half ass jobs like this all the time. Good job man for fixing it right I hope you got compensated for work not many people are willing to do.
Yeah i got paid well
18:10 - SO (600v, oil resistant) and SJO (300v “J”stands for Junior, oil resistant) are portable power cord designations that refer to the outer jacket material. Either type is possible in this application, although SOOW or SJOOW would be better suited here since the “W” stands for water resistant. You have SJOOW in your hand. That’s 300v (J), outer (jacket) and inner (conductors) oil resistant insulation, and water resistant (W).