human
Well-known member
So this week when I cleaned the filter on my furnace, which is also the air handler for the air conditioner, I noticed an excessive amount of condensation dripping down and subsequently noticed the engineered wood floor starting to curl up in the hallway. As is usually the case in hot weather, it took about three days to get a service technician out to the house and what he found was pretty depressing.
The condensation problem has been happening for a long time and the gas furnace is rusted out to the point that it would be dangerous to operate this winter so I was faced with three choices: patch it up with no guarantee of how long it would last, replace just the furnace with a five-year warranty or spend a bit more and replace the whole system for about $7,000 and get a ten-year warranty. Considering the lack of longevity for modern HVAC systems, I chose the latter option. They'll be back Monday to install it.
On the one hand, I can't be too disappointed because this Singer system is original to the house, which was built in 1970. Fifty years is a good, long run for any system and I have no illusions that the new system will last anywhere near that long and in that respect, I just hate the idea of getting on the replacement merry-go-round every 10-12 years. But hey, that's reality in the twenty-first century. Nothing's built to last. Of course, I've still got to do something about the floor in the hallway. After the expense of the HVAC system, I'm tempted to cheap out and put carpet down over it.
The condensation problem has been happening for a long time and the gas furnace is rusted out to the point that it would be dangerous to operate this winter so I was faced with three choices: patch it up with no guarantee of how long it would last, replace just the furnace with a five-year warranty or spend a bit more and replace the whole system for about $7,000 and get a ten-year warranty. Considering the lack of longevity for modern HVAC systems, I chose the latter option. They'll be back Monday to install it.
On the one hand, I can't be too disappointed because this Singer system is original to the house, which was built in 1970. Fifty years is a good, long run for any system and I have no illusions that the new system will last anywhere near that long and in that respect, I just hate the idea of getting on the replacement merry-go-round every 10-12 years. But hey, that's reality in the twenty-first century. Nothing's built to last. Of course, I've still got to do something about the floor in the hallway. After the expense of the HVAC system, I'm tempted to cheap out and put carpet down over it.