Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Reminder to home owners working on their landscaping in the fall


Reminder to home owners working on their landscaping in the fall, mind the condensate lines.  When these get buried, it backs up the water flow and will either flood the cabinet or worse, cause a water leak in the crawl space that someone may not notice until a mold issue develops. 

Monday, September 29, 2014

Great example of a condenser coil that needed a chemical cleaning.


Great example of a condenser coil that needed a chemical cleaning.  For homeowners with heat pumps, its critical to keep the coils clean year around to ensure the maximum efficiency and reliability from your equipment.

Call Integrity Heating & Cooling today to have your equipment inspected.

Call Us Today 704-596-3119


Friday, August 22, 2014

A clean condenser coil extends the life of your equipment and its components

A clean condenser coil extends the life of your equipment and its components. A note to remember:  When mowing grass around your condenser, never allow grass to be blown into the coil and never hit the condenser with your lawnmower. Bent coil fins from being struck by a lawnmower as seen here reduce the cooling efficiency of your equipment.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

HVAC Supco Surge Protector


An HVAC unit is one of the most expensive items you can purchase for your home. It only makes sense to protect it. You have surge protectors for the electronics inside your home, your computer, tv etc. Now consider one for the most expensive piece of equipment OUTSIDE your home. The Supco surge protector attaches to your HVAC unit and protects it from being damaged or ruined due to a surge from a lightning strike. It provides you with up to $1,000 protection on any repair due to power surges. Integrity HVAC Specialists would be happy to install this peace of mind saver for you at your home today. Don't delay, summer storm season is coming. Keep your unit and your wallet safe. Call Integrity Heating & Cooling today.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Integrity HVAC Servicing Lake Norman & Charlotte NC, Trane Clean Effects


This photo was taken during a routine maintenance of a Trane Clean Effects electronic air cleaner.  This filtration system is picking up a lot of the toxins and tar associated with cigarette smoke.  A great job for an air cleaner that, when well maintained, can filtrate particles up to 1/10th of a micron.  That's 1/100th of a human hair in diameter.

Call Integrity Heating And Cooling for all of your residential and commercial HVAC issues.

9115 - M Old Statesville Road
Charlotte, NC 28269
Office: 704-596-3119

Monday, February 17, 2014

Integrity Heating And Cooling Serving Charlotte & Lake Norman Areas


Integrity Heating & Air Conditioning has been providing the Lake Norman & Charlotte area, with top HVAC installation, HVAC repair and Customer service since 1995.

Your Family's Comfort is Our Business! Camaraderie and team work are essential to a stable work force committed to taking care of you, our client. Integrity Heating & Cooling is built on professionally trained employees who believe in 100% satisfaction. We are fully staffed to promptly and accurately take care of your heating and air conditioning requirements.

As an authorized TRANE dealer, Integrity heating & air HVAC proudly specializes in installing and servicing TRANE HVAC systems. We also maintain and fix any brand commercial or residential heating or air conditioning system. Our services include preparing your commercial or residential HVAC system for the summer or winter, HVAC maintenance, HVAC repair and TRANE system installation in and around the Lake Norman & Charlotte area. We provide superior service throughout Lake Norman & Charlotte area at affordable and reasonable rates.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Dangers of not getting your furnace inspected

A The dots finally connected Sunday morning, when a screaming alarm woke an ill and wobbly-legged Mooresville family around 8:30.
The four repeating beeps identified what had made the Freshwaters sick for days.
Carbon monoxide, a colorless, odorless gas, was slowly poisoning Ted Freshwater, his wife, Jesi, and their three kids.
First it was headaches, Freshwater said. Then dizziness.
By Saturday morning, the two boys – 10-year-old Ashton and 6-year-old Nathan – had thrown up. Their sister, Alexis, had become so lightheaded that she had to sit on the bathroom floor where she passed out, she later told her father.
The next morning, the alarm sounded, emergency personnel swarmed the house and four family members went to Lake Norman Regional Medical Center. Sixteen-year-old Alexis, who had spent the night at a friend’s house, was not home at the time.
All four had elevated levels of the deadly gas in their blood and were released after a few hours, Freshwater said.
“Everything didn’t really point back to (carbon monoxide) until after the fact, unfortunately,” he said.
After the fact almost didn’t happen.
For days, family members tried to understand why they were sick and achy. Perhaps it was the flu. Maybe it was food poisoning.
Freshwater, 38, never thought about carbon monoxide. Still, he decided to check the home’s alarm Saturday night – the first time he checked it since the family moved from Ohio more than three years ago.
A battery was put in backward. He replaced them.
The next morning the alarm, situated about 10 feet from the home’s furnace room, sounded.
Freshwater said he rolled out of bed a little disoriented and weak-legged. A 911 dispatcher told the family to evacuate.
“With the batteries being incorrect, who knows, it could have been like this since we’ve been here,” said Freshwater, adding he felt better Monday than he has in months.
He said inspectors found a crack in an internal part of the furnace Monday afternoon and would replace the unit later this week. It’s unclear when the crack appeared.
On Tuesday, Freshwater said the landlord asked that the family move out by the end of February. The family had been renting the home month-to-month. Freshwater said he didn’t know if the leak had something to do with the request to move.
According to the U.S. Fire Administration, more than 150 people a year die from non-fire related accidental carbon monoxide poisoning.
Last year, three people died over a two-month period in a Boone hotel room when the gas leaked up from an improperly ventilated pool heater. It wasn’t until after an 11-year-old Rock Hill boy died that officials discovered carbon monoxide had killed the guests.
Cars, generators and fossil-fuel burning appliances, such as furnaces, stoves and water heaters, can leak carbon monoxide.
Gary Styers, Mooresville fire marshal, said the town sees an increase in the gas-related calls during the winter as residents heat their homes.
“Obviously there’s no odor, no color,” Styers said. “There’s no way of knowing carbon monoxide is in the home unless you have a detector.”
Last month, Mooresville Fire-Rescue partnered with BRK Brands, an Illinois home-protection company, to give away 100 carbon monoxide alarms to town residents.
Curt Deaton, Mooresville fire chief, said the department has dished out fewer than 10 so far. He said firefighters would give them out on a first come, first served basis.
According to N.C. statute, carbon monoxide alarms must be in all rented homes and any new residence with a fossil-fuel burning heater, appliance, fire place or an attached garage.
Most alarms cost between $30 and $40.
“(Carbon monoxide is) not something that people normally think of,” Deaton said. “It’s kind of a second thought.”
Freshwater said he’s checked the batteries several times in his home’s smoke detector but had never bothered to look at them in the carbon monoxide alarm hanging just inches away.
Now he’s urging everyone to do it.
“A matter of a couple dollars in batteries could have cost my family their lives,” he said.