- Joined
- Dec 1, 2002
- Posts
- 23,744
So, just need some advice.
Came home today, heat is out. My house is managed by a realty company not the owner. It was after their closing hours and I don't really think this qualifies as an 'emergency'. It is still in the 60s in the house, not miserable yet.
ANYWAY, since I figure I will call tomorrow, I'm not sure if they will get anyone out tomorrow and even if they do, I fully expect they won't do any more than a diagnosis tomorrow, then parts ordering, and I think I'm looking at early to mid next week at the earliest before having this thing repaired.
So, I started my own troubleshooting. I've basically got the problem narrowed down to a bad PCB on the unit causing the blower motor to not come on, so when the gas lights, the air doesn't move, it overheats and auto-shuts down.
My question is this. I call the property manager tomorrow, despite having an idea of what the issue is, I don't really think I should tell them that I've been messing with the furnace. I surely don't want to be blamed for 'breaking' it and charged for any repairs. The part though is 150+ bucks and I'm surely not fixing this myself (as in out of pocket).
At the same time, I want this fixed quickly. I have thought about taking the PCB out and attempting to fix whatever bad solder joints are causing the failure, but again, HVAC tech comes in, finds a PCB that has been amateurishly soldered, I don't want the blame.
This is the first time I've ever had a company for a property manager, if it was a single landlord, I would feel more comfortable about being honest, letting them know I can fix it, and just wanting a credit for the parts off next months rent. Right now though I don't know how to best handle this.
Issues? Possible problems I'm getting myself into? Comments?
Alright, enough rambling, thanks for reading.
Came home today, heat is out. My house is managed by a realty company not the owner. It was after their closing hours and I don't really think this qualifies as an 'emergency'. It is still in the 60s in the house, not miserable yet.
ANYWAY, since I figure I will call tomorrow, I'm not sure if they will get anyone out tomorrow and even if they do, I fully expect they won't do any more than a diagnosis tomorrow, then parts ordering, and I think I'm looking at early to mid next week at the earliest before having this thing repaired.
So, I started my own troubleshooting. I've basically got the problem narrowed down to a bad PCB on the unit causing the blower motor to not come on, so when the gas lights, the air doesn't move, it overheats and auto-shuts down.
My question is this. I call the property manager tomorrow, despite having an idea of what the issue is, I don't really think I should tell them that I've been messing with the furnace. I surely don't want to be blamed for 'breaking' it and charged for any repairs. The part though is 150+ bucks and I'm surely not fixing this myself (as in out of pocket).
At the same time, I want this fixed quickly. I have thought about taking the PCB out and attempting to fix whatever bad solder joints are causing the failure, but again, HVAC tech comes in, finds a PCB that has been amateurishly soldered, I don't want the blame.
This is the first time I've ever had a company for a property manager, if it was a single landlord, I would feel more comfortable about being honest, letting them know I can fix it, and just wanting a credit for the parts off next months rent. Right now though I don't know how to best handle this.
Issues? Possible problems I'm getting myself into? Comments?
Alright, enough rambling, thanks for reading.
