used ac unit for mobile home

Address: 5501 sw 58th pl City: Ocala, FL 34474 This partially furnished 2br 2ba home has a private backyard, the outside was repainted, newer windows, high rise toi... Florida Real Estate Outlet Call: 352-438-9621 Address: 8880 SW 27TH AVE City: Ocala, FL 34476 A partly furnished 2BR 2BA WITH  A NEW ROOFOVER IN 2012, NEW APPLIANCES 2011, NEW AC IN 2012, all nestled in a quiet... Address: 2828 NE 49th Avenue #89 City: Ocala, FL 34470 2/2 DOUBLEWIDE, LARGE KITHEN FRONT ENCLOSED FL ROOM, OVERSIZED CARPORT LARG STORAGE SHED PLUS TOOL SHED. Suzanne Wigginton, Homerun Realty Call: (352) 875-3594 Address: 3150 NE 36th Ave Lot 227 PRICED FOR A QUICK SALE! 2 Bedroom 2 Bath double wide in the 55+ Community, Spanish Oaks. Home has been well kept and... Address: 6050 SW 56TH TER JUST GO ACROSS THE STREET TO THE POOL AND CLUBHOUSE! A GREAT 2BR 2BA HOMES OF MERIT HOME IN SADDLE OAK CLUB! Address: 6120 sw 57th ave THIS IS A GREAT 2BR 2BA FURNISHED MANUFACTURED HOME IN SW OCALA WITH A NEWLY INSTALLED AC, A ROOFOVER, A BIG PANTRY, ...
Address: 5641 SW 56TH PL HERE IS A WONDERFUL 1991 2BR 2BA HOME WITH INSIDE LAUNDRY, A NEW WATER HEATER IN 2014, ALL NESTLED IN A 55+ COMMUNITY...How to Inspect the heating systems in mobile homes, trailers, double-wides, multi-wides: How to spot common and dangerous defects in heating equipment incuding furnaces and boilers, inadequate heat distribution, freeze-ups, and safety hazards. How to save heating costs for mobile homes and trailers or multi-wides. Page top sketch was provided courtesy of Carson Dunlop Associates, a Toronto engineering, education, and home inspection company. The red tag was apparently covered up when vinyl siding was installed. Now I want to sell the property, but I can't because I do not have the red tag number. How do I get the red tag number? The flashing of the lights mentioned are they in the whole house or just one outlet? If it's just one outlet it may be just the outlet, if it's the whole house the problem may be at the main connection.
I am looking at buying a double wide through an estate sale. The "trustee" of the estate is the deceased owners daughter, who know very little to anything about mobile homes (as I). I am hiring an inspector, how ever he wont be available for 3 weeks and I have an immediate concern... While standing in the living room I was startled out of my skin to see a cat jump into the living room from a floor vent ( vent cover was pulled off) I looked into the vent and it appears to be completley open - no duct work - just a view of the ground beneath. The daughter said that that was common and is there for ventilation. LOL Tell me this isnt so! Thank you SO much for the wonderful cat - HVAC system question. Yes I can tell you "it isn't so" - that is, it is not good practice to simply leave floor vents in a home open to the outdoors such that anything, including a cat (or worse, a raccoon) can hop in for a visit. I can imagine a few reasons why you might have found the missing duct work and open floor vent, all adding up to some more trouble and work for you.
For example most likely there was a heating or heating and cooling system that used air but that has disintegrated, been damaged, fallen off, or was simply removed and abandoned. Sometimes too, when warm or cool air delivery into a home is poor in flow rate or quantity, people try to improve system operation by adding more return air to the system by just cutting an opening that lets outdoor air into the system somewhere. new ac unit arizonaThe problem is this is the most expensive possible way to heat or cool a home since it's a "one way" design - we take un-conditioned air from outside, heat it or cool it, then try moving it into the living area.how much does it cost to install an ac unit Really the most significant implication of the cat in the hat, I mean cat in the vent discovery in your possible future home's heating sysem is that it's a red flag to watch out for other work done or "problems solved" by the same person on that home - as you may find other amateur workmanship that lengthens the list of repairs and improvements needed to make the home safe and habitable to normal standards.new outside ac unit cost
Keep me posted, and send along photos if you can (use the CONTACT US link at page bottom or top) - especially if ... the cat comes back. I suppose a less ridiculous explanation that the owner could have invented might have been to explain "Oh I forgot to tell you, that's just Marion, my mom's cat. Marion comes with the house. The hole in the floor is her pet door." Below our photographs illustrate several unsafe conditions at a house trailer's heating system inspected by D Friedman & S Vermilye during a mobile home site safety investigation. In addition to the absence of return air to the heating furnace we notice that I have a brand new thermo pride furnace for my moble home it ran fine for two months the furnace started cylcling, it would burn then the fan would come on after a couple minutes the call to burn would shut off, then the fan would shut off a few mins later, upon fan going off the burner would cycle for heat again and the fan would come on heat would stop and so on.
but the heat keeps climbing it doesn't stop so i got ahold of the installer he told me it was the thermostat, i replaced it and still does the same its under warranty but i can't afford to pay a serve man 200.00 to come to tell me the problem. is it the burner control or is it the computer board can it be reset and how IF the warm air output from a supply register is blowing right onto the room wall thermostat, then "the thermostat is the problem" could be a correct statement. Otherwise I suspect a bad fan limit switch or improper installation of that control. For example, if the limit switch is mis-adjusted or if its sensor spring is binding, the system won't work properly. Watch out: a fan limit switch that is bent, damaged, mis-handled, even mis-adjusted, can be dangerous, risking damage to the heating equipment or even a fire. Diagnostic articles for heating problem troubleshooting are at 23 January 2015 Chuck said: I have a doublewide mobile home with the air ducts in the cieling.
A rat has gotten into the air duct and chewed insulation and now insulation is blowing through the vent. I am going to have a company put a camera up there to find the break so it can be fixed. My question is would it be easier for me once I knew exactly where the break was to just go in from the roof. It seems alot faster and less expensive than tearing out the cieling and replacing sheetrock, tape and bed and repainting, not to mention the mess in the house. What are your thoughts? If your doublewide has a conventional continuous metal roof over an inaccessible space then you won't do well trying to cut into the roof and you risk creating a point of future roof leaks. I'd be inclined to work from the interior. But then I haven't seen your home. If there is an attic access (which some doublewides have) then of course it'd make sense to get into that space and remove and replace the ductwork and any contaminated insulation. Further, if there were rats in the ductwork, you want to replace ALL of the ductwork and insulation where rats were nesting lest their pee and poop and other debris become a health concern later on.