The AC Saga

The saga with our air conditioner has continued since my last post on the matter. One of the few disadvantages of growing up as an “Army brat” is that most of my formative years were spent living in apartment-style housing, where any D.I.Y. I may have learned to fix things that went wrong consisted of my parents calling in the problem. I also spent the first several years of my career after school also living in rental housing. When Andrea and I returned from London in 2001 and bought this house, it was really the first time I’d been responsible for the maintenance of anything more than a car, which of course I’d always paid someone else to do for me.

The contractor we called to bail us out last Sunday, Busby’s, who continues to do quality work for us and also to offer good advice, pointed out a number of problems, with both our downstairs unit, which was the one that wasn’t cooling, and with the upstairs unit, which wasn’t draining correctly due to a horribly lame drain pipe routing job by the previous contractor, Bryson’s.

Busby’s charged the downstairs gas pack, which was missing quite a bit of freon when they came on the Sunday we lost the AC. Since then, the downstairs unit has been working like a champ, but apparently the evaporator coil is what’s leaking, and will need to be replaced eventually if I don’t want to keep refilling it with freon.

The upstairs unit has never drained properly, so the drain pipe was backing up and dripping in to the secondary drain pan, the galvanized metal of which is pretty well corroded by now. With the notion that the drainage was the problem confirmed by the contractor, and with a helpful suggestion from Scott, who has a similar set-up and had a similar problem, to vent the primary drain pipe, I set out to fix the problem this weekend. Scott helped me with the first venting of the drain pipe, which involved sawing the pipe in half and using three organic solvents to clean, prime and cement the pipe ends together with a T joint. Unfortunately that didn’t fix the problem, but now I could see when the primary drain backed up.

I went around the outside of our house and several PVC drain outlets. I figured two of them belonged to the air handler for our upstairs air conditioner, so I hooked the wet vac up to each one in turn. I pulled nothing but air from two of them, which makes me wonder what they’re connected to, but that’s a mystery for another day. The final two I tested yielded a good 3 gallons of water, so I suspected one of them was the air handler. After running the AC again for an hour, I figured out which one it was. The system ran much better with the drain line clear, but even with the newly-installed vent, the drain backed up again after only an hour and a half.

Scott again pitched in a suggestion, this time to try venting the drain pipe downhill from the trap. I didn’t understand why that would be different from venting it above the trap, but those T joints are less than a dollar, and I was trying to avoid a thousand dollar repair bill to have a professional fix the drainage problem, so I tried it. While I was there, I also corrected a routing issue of the primary drain, where for some reason known only to the original installer, the primary drain pipe popped up and over the secondary drain, gaining at least an inch in elevation when it really should have been losing 1/4″ per foot, according to the installation manual I found online.

The difference is remarkable. Twenty minutes after the air kicks on, the drain pipe starts a steady drip. The secondary drain pain ends up what I’ll charitably call barely wet, rather than its’ previous habit of filling with water over an inch deep.

It’s only the day after the fix so I’m only running that unit when I’m home so I can keep an eye on it, but at this point I’m feeling pretty good that this latest home ownership hassle is well under control and, if not solved, at least we’re well on our way to a proper solution.

Tagged | Comments Off on The AC Saga

Roughing it at home

Yesterday afternoon when I came inside from edging and mowing the front lawn, Andrea commented she felt pretty hot, and I didn’t think much of it because of course I’d been outside, so anything out of the sun felt cool to me.

Last night I noticed there wasn’t any air coming from the vents downstairs. The thermostat was set to 78 degrees fahrenheit, and the thermometer read 83. Uh-oh! The single package gas and electric unit, or “gas pack” as the HVAC people around here seem to call it, that cools and heats the downstairs was running, the top of the machine was cool, and showing some condensation, and air was being exhausted from the unit by the fan, but nothing out of the vents. The 3-month filter was replaced in May and didn’t look especially clogged or dirty.

I didn’t find a good troubleshooting guide online, as most of them are written for full-electric systems with separate blower and condensor units, like what we have upstairs, which is luckily still working fine. This isn’t the first problem we’ve had with this gas pack, but the other problems due to a brain-dead installation job. Our contractor had installed the unit in a little “L” of brick right next to our house and chimney, so the compressor and air intake were sitting about four inches from exposed brick, which of course gets nice and hot in the summer. The unit had to work extra-hard to overcome the radiant heat from the brick, and it fried the compressor.

A couple of years ago, we had a different contractor come out and pour a pad for the unit that was set several feet away from the house, so now the compressor and intake grill have plenty of open air around them.

My guess is the system just needs a good coolant charge, so in goes the service call, and I guess we’ll just spend more time roughing it upstairs if the first floor gets too hot!

Posted in General | Tagged | Comments Off on Roughing it at home

Our Guide to Roughing It

The good news is it’s been raining in Georgia since lunchtime yesterday, exactly the kind of rain we need, the steady rain that soaks in to the drought-dried ground instead of just running off like most of the gully-washer thunderstorms we get. As of last week we were nearly 12 inches of rain behind this year, and this has to have helped.

The bad news is, this was our camping weekend. Andrea and the girls headed out Friday afternoon to choose the campsite, and even got our tent, which is big enough to park a small car inside, mostly set up.

I headed out after work and we immediately cooked dinner and enjoyed being in the woods. There were several deer grazing around a nearby clearing, which gave us something to watch as dusk fell. It surprised me that Finley wasn’t the least bit interested in the deer, though late at night when something was poking around the edge of the campsite, he must have growled at it for an hour.

In the morning, I used my mobile phone to check on the weather forecasts, which all week had been calling for a 20 or 30 percent chance of showers on Saturday afternoon. As Saturday afternoon got closer, the percentage chance of rain kept increasing, until we were pretty certain we were going to get some rain. Elizabeth went on a “big girl bike” (this phrase is hers, to differentiate it from the tricycle she used to ride) around the sizeable campground, and I went on solo a road ride to Appling and back. We both finished our rides in an hour and a half, and it was just starting to slowly rain.

We ate some lunch, then spent an hour or so playing in the water at the lake, with Elizabeth splashing around having a good time, and Finley chasing a stick until I got bored with throwing it. We got cold and headed back to the campsite around 1:30. By 5:00, we had tried to get Elizabeth to take a nap, but she wasn’t really interested so we were struggling with the question, “How do you entertain a 3-year-old for a day and a half inside a tent?” We were expecting a rain shower or two, not an all-day soaker, so we hadn’t brought any rain gear. Besides, we’re in a drought, why would we need rain gear?

We decided to come home and collect the tent in the morning, which turns out to be a good decision as it’s STILL raining out there as I write this. Elizabeth was sad we were leaving the campsite last night, but we played for a while in the tent after announcing the decision and she got used to it. Turns out she needn’t have worried — she slept solidly from the moment we arrived home at 6 PM, until 7 this morning!

So I woke up in our comfy bed, and now I’m sipping a cappuccino listening to some springy Baroque music, really roughing it while I blog. But soon it’ll be time to go eat a wet picnic lunch and collect the tent — this time we’ll take our raingear!

Tagged , | Comments Off on Our Guide to Roughing It

Fluoride in drinking water

Andrea reads the forums and articles on several parenting sites and sometimes points me to information that’s pretty interesting for our situation. Apparently, the American Dental Association acknowledges breast milk as “the most complete form of nutrition for infants,” and goes on to say that young children, and especially infants, shouldn’t drink fluorinated water. The fluoride isn’t an issue for us because Elena still gets 100% of her diet from breast milk, but Elizabeth drinks a lot of water for her size, so we’ve got to do some more research to find out if we need to be giving her different water.

marloelaine.com has a bunch of helpful links in the comments, but the gist is, our refrigerator, which like most of them has a carbon-based filter, doesn’t remove fluoride, so if we decide we want Elizabeth to get less fluoride in her water, we’ll have to either get a reverse-osmosis filter, or we’ll have to start buying her bottled water.

Researching items like this is, to me, one of the biggest advantages of the Internet age. It really lowers the time and money cost of finding information to help answer important lifestyle and health questions. Of course, anyone can put up a website, and many do, so we also have to be careful about our sources when we make decisions based on information we find on the Web.

Tagged | Comments Off on Fluoride in drinking water

Pro Cycling Doping Admissions

So many current and former pro cyclists have admitted, all in the space of a few weeks, to doping during their careers that I’m having trouble keeping track. Numerous members of Team Telekom during the mid to late 1990’s have admitted, including Rolf Aldag, Erik Zabel, and Bjarne Riis.

Riis doped during 1996, the year he ended Miguel Indurain’s five years of Tour de France dominance. “My yellow jersey is in box at home, you can come and collect it,” said Riis of his Tour performance. “What matters to me are my memories.” I’d like to read a full transcript of the press conference, because that sounds pretty cynical for a guy who’s still deeply involved in pro cycling as the owner and manager of Team CSC. With all these admissions flowing out of Telekom, and Jan Ullrich already involved in a doping scandal, it seems likely to me that he doped during his win of the Tour de France in 1997, and probably kept it up from there.

Of course the logical next question becomes, what about Lance? Did he or didn’t he? I’ve never seen a quote from him saying, “I didn’t dope,” I’ve only seen quotes from him saying something along the lines of, “I have been tested many times, and never been caught,” a disingenuous comment at best, since there are now many confessed dopers who were never caught.

Personally, I don’t mind if people who doped are still involved in the sport if they’re clean now, I just want to see all the closets opened and the skeletons removed.

Tagged | Comments Off on Pro Cycling Doping Admissions