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HVAC Repair Venice 800) 215-8151 Climate Control
http://www.climatecontrolla.com (800) 215-8151 HVAC Repair Venice AC and Heating Repair in Venice CA When you live in Southern California, where extreme summ...
By: Ruby Harris
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HVAC Repair Venice 800) 215-8151 Climate Control - Video
Indianapolis, Indiana (PRWEB) April 18, 2014
For Indiana residents looking to save money on home maintenance services this spring, Carrier Comfort Team offers a discount on all heating and cooling services. Participating dealers, including those that provide air conditioner repair in Jamestown Indiana, encourage homeowners to take advantage of reduced prices now while HVAC companies experience a low volume of calls. HVAC professionals also suggest spring is the best time to service both furnaces and air conditioners, as one piece of equipment has been working hard all winter while the other is getting ready to keep indoor spaces cool for the summer.
From now until April 30, Indiana residents can receive a $25 reduction in cost for furnace or air conditioner repair, service, or replacement. For more details on specials and products, new customers are encouraged to visit http://carriercomfortteam.com/the-difference/promotions/comfort_cash or visit http://carriercomfortteam.com to find a local dealer.
About Carrier Comfort Team Carrier Comfort Team dealers serve the HVAC needs of residents in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, and Missouri. Members of the Carrier Comfort Team service all makes and models of heating and cooling equipment. Services include routine cleaning and safety inspections, maintenance, repair, installation, indoor air quality, geothermal, and energy audits.
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HVAC Companies Offer Comfort Cash Discount on All Services for Spring
Tempco tops in service -
April 19, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Tempco has an important company policy, to provide the best customer service so customers are always satisfied.
Owner Tye Leishman believes his company is living up to this key policy and that it is contributing directly to the companys success.
We are available 24-7 for all our customers service needs, Tye explains. Since we provide service to the grocery stores, we have our phones by our beds. When their alarms go off and the store manager determines its something that requires our specialized skills, they need us to come right away. No matter what time of day or night, even at 3 am, were there within 20 minutes.
That same level of service is available to homeowners who are Tempcos Comfort Plan members. Benefits of joining the Comfort Plan include a five-year service guarantee on any repair, no overtime charges, and a 10 per cent savings on all service. If not completely satisfied, we have a 100 per cent money-back guarantee, he said, adding, Were proud to provide such a high level of service. Its just what we do.
He recalls one of his technicians receiving a call on New Years Eve from a customer on Texada Island who was having a problem. Although the customer was able to stay that night in a second home on his property with heat, the Tempco technician was on the ferry in the early morning of New Years Day.
Tye invites everyone to come to Tempcos expanded showroom on Courtenay Street just below Marine Avenue. Working gas fireplaces and heat pumps are set up so customers can see a variety of options available for their homes.
We have no problems servicing a 50-year-old furnace but we like customers to be aware of the benefits of replacement, he says. They will be spending three to four times more for heating costs than they would with a new unit. Unlike an old pair of slippers or a comfy recliner, an energy-wasting heating system should not be kept around any longer.
In most cases, the energy savings will pay for the new heating system.
Currently, FortisBC is offering an $800 rebate when homeowners replace an old operating gas furnace. Customers interested in the FortisBC rebate need to acquire a pre-qualification code before July 4, 2014 and have a new furnace installed before the end of August.
Also, Tempco and York are offering cash rebates and financing when installing a new high-efficiency heating system.
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Tempco tops in service
Best HVAC Service Venice 800) 215-8151 Climate Control
http://www.climatecontrolla.com (800) 215-8151 Best HVAC Service Venice Cooling and Heater Repair in Venice When you live in LA, where extreme summer heat gi...
By: Ruby Harris
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Best HVAC Service Venice 800) 215-8151 Climate Control - Video
Thursday, April 17, 2014 1:05 AM EDT
By BRIAN M. JOHNSON STAFF WRITER
SOUTHINGTON The Town Council unanimously approved Norescos energy upgrades and a new pavilion dedicated to Wounded Warriors at a meeting Monday.
Keith Hanlon and John Kauppinen, project developer and senior account executive at Noresco respectively, gave a PowerPoint presentation of their study to the council Monday night. It was approved six to zero by the council members in attendance, with John Barry, Dawn Miceli, and Christopher Palmieri absent.
The study indicated that the town could save nearly one million dollars annually by upgrading heating and cooling systems, streetlights, and other devices and components in municipal and school buildings. The study concluded that it would cost $13.1 million to replace the current technology, which is over twenty years old and requires frequent repair. Noresco guarantees the projected savings and will pay the difference if they turn out to be less than estimated.
The utility savings and maintenance savings in the first year alone will pay for the cost of our financing arrangement and our measurement and verification services, said Hanlon.
These are necessary improvements to bring the technology up to the current standard, said Kauppinen. A lot of the old equipment has reached the end of its useful life.
The other agenda items were also approved unanimously. Among these, was a motion to approve local 8th grader Andrew Krars planned Eagle Scout project. Andrew, who had already received approval from the Parks and Recreation department in February, gave a PowerPoint presentation detailing his plan to raise over $2,000 to construct a pavilion along the Linear Trail near the Dog Park.
Andrew said the pavilion would be built to honor Wounded Warriors.
It is my desire to do a project that has a personal inspiration and gives back to the local community, he said.
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Southington OKs energy upgrades, new pavilion
As April opened with wind-driven snow and temperatures that still featured wind-chill readings, Minnesotans longingly looked from their windows waiting for the day when ice-covered lakes would open and fresh-water fishing could resume. Its a way of life and in Minnesota sport fishing is a $2.8 billion industry of vital importance to the states economy and well being.
The importance of our states natural resources can be taken for granted. It shouldnt be. As winter releases its long-lasting grip it is time to take stock of the condition of state water bodies and reinforce the need for better stewardship. There is work to do.
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has produced findings on the condition of our lakes and rivers that cant be ignored. The DNR has identified bodies of water that are infested with a number of invasive aquatic plants, including nearly 300 lakes with infestations of Eurasian water milfoil. Nearly 200 lakes and rivers are infested with zebra mussels.
The seriousness of invasive aquatic plant species and zebra mussels is often dwarfed by the growing threat of Asian carp that continue to migrant north and pose a threat of reaching northern Minnesota. Pictures of carp jumping into boats grab our attention. The problems related to weeds and mussels that clog lakes and choke off nutrients needed by fish are hidden below the surface.
It is encouraging that some positive signs are coming from St. Paul. Gov. Mark Dayton and the Legislature are crafting a bonding bill that provides badly needed dollars to address the seriousness of many aquatic invasive species.
There is support for $6 million in bonding dollars to assist the Minnesota Aquatic Invasive Species Research Center at the University of Minnesota. The center operates in partnership with the DNR in the effort to combat plant infestations, zebra mussels and the spread of carp. Funding is desperately needed. The bonding dollars would provide upgrades to the centers century-old building and target inadequate water, electrical and heating and cooling systems. With an improved facility, the center expects to add more student researchers tasked with studying invasive aquatic plants. A $3 million bonding proposal would be matched by $3 million in University dollars for a new lab to study problems related to bees.
Our lawmakers need to make sure these projects are not left on the cutting table when the final bonding bill is carved out. They are simply too important to pass over.
Bonding for a $5 million dam repair and carp barrier on the Rum River in Anoka has not been supported by the governor. The dam repair ranks only 42nd on the DNRs priority list. The threat of carp migrating north to Mille Lacs Lake through the Rum River is real and the Anoka barrier is a step to protect the states marquee walleye fishery from a carp infestation. It should not be ignored for long.
It is not only lawmakers who must be good stewards. Everyone who launches a boat needs to do their part to avoid spreading aquatic plants and zebra mussels from lake to lake. And there have been positive results.
The DNR continues to work with local government to train monitors who check boats at launch areas. Conservation officers remain vigilant and fewer violators were issued misdemeanor tickets in 2013 compared to 2012. Watershed district boards and private lake associations are stepping forward. These efforts, coupled with public education, will help slow the spread of invasive aquatic plant species and zebra mussels that are here now.
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Editorial: Take steps to protect state waters
East Brunswick, N.J. (PRWEB) April 15, 2014
Nows the time for New Jersey homeowners to get their homes ready for the spring and summer weather, says Gold Medal Service, an award-winning area heating, cooling, plumbing, electrical and drain service company. Gold Medal Service experts have already started their busy spring check-up season, helping homeowners repair any damage caused by winter storms or power outages, and ensuring their air conditioners are in prime condition before the summer heat. The company has started to get a lot of calls for air conditioning maintenance and repair, and stresses that now is the time to get it done before the hot weather arrives.
Your air conditioner is most likely to break down on the hottest day of the year which is also the busiest time for service contractors running calls, so you could face long wait times if you experience an outage, said Mike Agugliaro, Gold Medal Service co-founder. Plus, most manufacturers require routine maintenance on a system to keep the warranty valid.
Not only will Gold Medal Service experts check homeowners air conditioners, but they will also be happy to take a look at plumbing and electrical systems hit hard by snow and severe storms that have plagued New Jersey this winter. Cold temperatures can make pipes prone to freezing and developing leaks, and power outages can have a rough impact on electrical wiring in a home.
If there are any problems in your home, the longer you wait to fix them, the bigger a problem they could become, said Agugliaro. Homeowners dont want to have to pay more money for repair or replacement on pipes or electrical work down the road, so its best to get everything checked out now to make sure small problems do not escalate into bigger issues.
About Gold Medal Service Gold Medal Service, rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau, was founded in New Jersey in 1994 with just two employees. Their vision was to provide homeowners with a reliable and trustworthy home service company customers could count on to fix just about anything that could go wrong in a home. Since then Gold Medal has grown to include more than 120 employees and technicians solving plumbing, heating, cooling, electric, drain, and sewer issues for homeowners across the state of New Jersey. Gold Medal Service is an Angies List Super Service Award recipient. For more information, call 800-853-6060 or visit http://www.goldmedalservice.com.
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New Jersey Residents Preparing to Stay Cool in the Summer Heat
Yelp Furnace Repair Beverly Hills 800) 215-8151 Climate Control
http://www.climatecontrolla.com (800) 215-8151 Yelp Furnace Repair Beverly Hills A/C and Heater Repair in LA When you live in LA, where extreme summer heat g...
By: Sue Sampson
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Yelp Furnace Repair Beverly Hills 800) 215-8151 Climate Control - Video
HVAC Repair west Beverly Hills 800) 215-8151 Climate Control
http://www.climatecontrolla.com (800) 215-8151 HVAC Repair west Beverly Hills Air Conditioning and Heater Services in Beverly Hills When you live in Southern...
By: Sue Sampson
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HVAC Repair west Beverly Hills 800) 215-8151 Climate Control - Video
New self-healing plastics developed -
April 12, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
11-Apr-2014
Contact: Monika Landgraf presse@kit.edu 49-721-608-47414 Helmholtz Association
This news release is available in German.
Scratches in the car finish or cracks in polymer material: Self-healing materials can repair themselves by restoring their initial molecular structure after the damage. Scientists of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Evonik Industries have developed a chemical crosslinking reaction that ensures good short-term healing properties of the material under mild heating. The research results have now been published in the Advanced Materials journal. DOI:10.1002/adma.201306258
The KIT group headed by Christopher Barner-Kowollik uses the possibility of crosslinking functionalized fibers or small molecules by a reversible chemical reaction for the production of self-healing materials. These so-called switchable networks can be decomposed into their initial constituents and reassembled again after the damage. The advantage is that the self-healing mechanism can be initiated any time by heat, light or by the addition of a chemical substance. "Our method does not need any catalyst, no additive is required," Professor Barner-Kowollik says. The holder of the Chair for Preparative Macromolecular Chemistry at KIT studies syntheses of macromolecular chemical compounds.
It took about four years of research for the working group of Barner-Kowollik, together with the Project House Composites of Creavis, the strategic innovation unit of Evonik, to develop a novel polymer network. At comparably low temperatures from 50C to 120C, the network exhibits excellent healing properties within a few minutes. Reducing the time needed for healing and optimizing the external conditions, under which the healing process takes place, are the major challenges of research relating to self-healing materials. Using the healing cycle developed by them, the KIT researchers have found a large number of intermolecular compounds that close again within a very short term during cooling. Mechanical tests, such as tensile and viscosity tests, confirmed that the original properties of the material can be restored completely. "We succeeded in demonstrating that test specimens after first healing were bound even more strongly than before," Barner-Kowollik says.
The self-healing properties can be transferred to a large range of plastics known. Apart from self-healing, the material is given another advantageous property: As flowability is enhanced at higher temperatures, the material can be molded well. A potential field of application lies in the production of fiber-reinforced plastics components for automotive and aircraft industries.
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In the consortium developing the novel crosslinking reaction, the chemical company of Evonik is the industry partner. The research partners of KIT are the Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research, Dresden, and the Australian National University, Canberra.
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New self-healing plastics developed
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