It is important to make sure that your heating unit is prepared for the upcoming winter ahead, and how crucial it is to have a Fall Safety Inspection. You may think your heating system is clean and working fine, but do you really know that is it safe? Delta Heating & Cooling’s fall safety check will provide you and your family peace of mind knowing your heating unit is ready for the cold winter months ahead. The Farmers’ Almanac is predicting a cold winter this year. Read below to find out more about the importance of Sheer’s fall safety check.
Prevention is the Best Medicine for Cary and Apex Area Residents
Fall Tune-Ups and Inspections are a great way to ensure that your heating unit is clean and functioning at the correct factory specifications. Having an inspection is about preventative care, it gives your trained HVAC technician an opportunity to spot a problem and fix it before you have a system failure.
Preventative care is one of the best ways to safeguard your heating system against unnecessary wear and tear, as well as maximize the longevity of it.
Cracked Heat Exchangers are Dangerous in the Triangle
When your trained technician from Delta Heating & Cooling performs a Fall Safety Inspection, they will first inspect your heat exchanger. The heat exchanger is a set of coils inside the furnace that are responsible for heating the air in your home. These coils are contained within the furnace. The burner sends combustion gases into the heat exchanger, while the blower motor sends the air from the blower across the heat exchanger. The heat exchanger then warms the air and sends it back into your home. This process creates exhaust gases that are released outside through the flue.
The heat exchanger is vital to heating your home all winter. Unfortunately, heat exchangers can crack over time which can pose a threat to your family’s safety. When a heat exchanger cracks it can cause carbon monoxide to leak into your home.
Normal use of your furnace causes wear and tear. The heat exchanger expands and contracts in order to heat your home. Years of expansion and contraction may lead to cracking or small leaks. If it is cracked, your trained service tech can advise you as to whether you should replace the part or possibly replace the entire system.
While heat exchangers will crack due to old age, they should last you at least fifteen years. Proper care and regular maintenance will maximize the life of your heat exchanger.
Carbon Monoxide
Carbon monoxide; also known as the silent killer, is an odorless, colorless, and tasteless gas that can be potentially life-threatening.
There are several ways carbon monoxide can show up in your home. Carbon monoxide is created whenever fuels (such as gasoline, wood, coal, natural gas, propane, oil, and methane) are burned incompletely. Anything used in the home that burns these fuels has the potential to cause carbon monoxide to leak into your home.
Everyday heating appliances can be the source of a carbon monoxide leak and should be properly ventilated. Boilers, water heaters, and fireplaces all burn fossil fuels and are potentially dangerous.
Furnaces can be a potential source of carbon monoxide when the heat exchanger cracks. A cracked heat exchanger releases carbon monoxide into the air circulated throughout your home. Having a certified technician from Delta Heating & Cooling perform a Fall Safety Inspection can prevent this from happening in your home. Schedule your safety inspection now with the experts at Delta, before it gets cold. Your certified technician will independently test for carbon monoxide throughout your home and show you the results. North Carolina code also requires homeowners to have a carbon monoxide detector in their home, if they have a fossil fuel burning appliance.
Contact us now to schedule your safety check or if we can answer any questions for you. One of our qualified customer service representatives will be glad to help!