Saturday, November 30, 2013

Mold and Your AC Unit


Mold is organic and is an important part of our our world. It is everywhere we go whether indoors or outdoors. It plays a very important part in our world by breaking down dead organic matter such as wood, paper, grass cuttings, leaves, decayed trees, plant cuttings and other things of nature. It does not belong indoors and should be limited. If given a chance, mold likes the drywall in your home also. You ask why, drywall has paper on both sides and is conducive to grow mold when moisture invades during a water leak or flood. It grows in your A/C Unit because there is a wet environment by the A/C Coils. The A/C Coils are a vital part of your air conditioning system. This is the area which takes water out of the air in your home. If it is not kept clean, your system will not work efficiently.

Poor quality filters can cause your A/C System to fail over time. We have seen this in many homes that were inspected and the homeowner didn't even know it existed. The extra stress placed on your system by blocked airflow due to dirt can cause your system to fail and grow mold on the coils. This stress on the A/C System can cause your blower motor to burn out and not cool the house efficiently.

As the A/C cools your home, it dehumidifies the air. The dehumidified water then drains off of the A/C Coils into the A/C drain pan and then runs out the A/C Drain line. There is always slime mold in your A/C Drain Pan. This is what causes a water backup in the unit. The mold and algae builds up and then finally stops up the A/C drain line. Some individuals put special antimicrobial tablets in the A/C Drain Pan to help suppress this growth. Special care must be used when using these tablets, some people are allergic to their ingredients and must avoid using them. The drain line should be monitored on a regular basis. Minimum checkup time is every 6 months. Look for the exterior location of the A/C drain line to see if it is draining properly.

Maintenance is important regarding your A/C or you can guarantee there will be a water backup or a leak if you do not. Have you A/C Contractor install an auto cutoff switch before the A/C Unit starts to leak. This is a good precaution to prevent a flood from you A/C Unit. If it starts to back up, call a proficient A/C Contractor that understands the importance of Indoor Air Quality. If you are not handy, consult with your A/C Contractor regarding a Maintenance Contract to take care of your A/C Unit. A/C leaks are the number one reason why mold grows in the A/C Closet. Sometimes we see it go undetected for 6 months and cause substantial damage. One of our clients was forced to move out while half of their 1st Floor drywall was removed and remediated for mold. It is not a good picture. Remember, maintain your A/C Unit and it will cool you for a long time.

Keeping the system clean is the filter's job. The average filter that comes with the unit is not a good quality filter. It is a typical factory filter. Using poor quality filters can cause results like mold growing on the coils. The cost of having a service call to clean or change the coils in your A/C System would pay for the high quality filters of at least 5 years. Using a fiberglass filter gives you minimal protection for your A/C System. The factory filter also gives you minimal protection from the elements in the air.

Our general rule is: Hold the filter up; if you an see through the filter, it only gives minimal protection from allergens, dirt, dander and mold spores. Our minimum recommended filter is a Merv 7 Pleated Filter. Look at the product label and find the MERV rating. They are available in Home Depot, Lowe's or your local hardware. As always, check with your A/C Units manufacturer to see if it the filter will void their warranty. This can be caused by using some of the too efficient pleated filters which can cause high arrestance of a Merv Rating. This high arrestance will cause dirt to bypass the filter and clog up the coils. We see this all the time. Remember, the filter company's only want to sell their filters and make money. I personally use Home Depot's "NaturalAire" Standard which is rated at Merv 8. II'm happy with the results of this filter. The only difference is, I change the filter once a month and recommend everyone to change your filter once a month to minimize exposure to allergens.

The Merv Rating stands for: Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value. It is a test by the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers. (ASHRAE) The number is so the consumer can compare filters. The higher the number, the more efficient it is.

Tips on A/C Maintenance

1. Most A/C Systems over 5 years old need to be serviced on an annual basis.

2. Routine maintenance can double the life of your unit and save you money.

3. Health risks can be dramatically reduced by proper system maintenance.

4. Energy costs will be lower by maintaining the A/C Unit.

5. Ducts should be inspected every 3 to 5 years for possible deterioration, contamination and leaks.

Why You Should Keep Up With Your AC Maintenance in a Desert Climate


How do cleanliness and routine maintenance affect my cooling costs?

Air conditioning units are a heavily relied on piece of machinery every year once the warmer temperatures start in desert areas such as Phoenix, Arizona. Over-use and under-care are the two main reasons most consumers end up paying ridiculous amounts in energy bills just to cool off their homes or businesses. If the unit or system can't function properly due to gunk build up, or leaks, the unit pushes harder to relieve the space of warm air. This extra push, causes the system to remain on longer than normal, and draws more attention to your thermostat. Basically saying, that you are uncomfortable due to the warmer than desired temperature of the space, so you decide to adjust the temperature. Once the unit is completely unable to remove the warm air from the space, it will shut down, causing unhappy consumers.

What are some of the ways I can keep up with the maintenance of my AC unit?

There are many ways you can keep up with maintaining proper function of your unit. One of the simplest ways to keep up with your unit is annually calling a local, quality HVAC Certified Technician. The technicians can then determine what, if anything, is wrong with your unit. In most cases, all units need is a good coil cleaning, to remove build-up of debris that block the flow of air, causing your system to work harder and minimizes your air conditioning efficiency. Coil cleaning requires an acid wash to thoroughly remove any build-up. Once coils are cleaned, a proper check of freon levels, and a coil inspection are recommended to fully determine if the cleaning will be of your benefit. If the technician discovers any pre-existing damages, the coils would then need to be replaced.

Another common repair, would be the removal of bad fuses, relays, or filters. Technicians examine the fuses, relays and filters to determine if a short could occur, or has already occurred, causing the undesirable performance of your air conditioning unit. If a short has occurred, the technician will then replace either the fuses, relays or filters causing the problem, and thoroughly clean the unit. Along with the fuses, relays, filters, and coils, AC units are also known for clogged lines. If a line is clogged, the condensation cannot drain, causing your AC unit to shut down. Not to worry though, if your AC unit falls into this category-it only requires a cleaning and a flush with compressed air.

Concerned because your a/c might be cool, but not cold?

If so, you might want to check into having your Freon filled. What is Freon? Well, Freon is a pressurized coolant used to cool the air and absorb any heat found traveling through the coils in your AC unit. If it is discovered that your Freon level is low, an HVAC Certified Technician will refill the level back to the proper amount, check for any leaks in the Freon system, including the coils, and repair any holes found in the Freon lines.

Although these simple maintenance checks and repairs may sound costly, rest assured. If you contact a HVAC Certified Technician, expertise, quality, reliability and affordable prices are the only thing you'll find-not the outrageous repair bills! Contact your local Phoenix area HVAC Certified Technician today.

Net, Gross & Full Service Leases


We are going to be leasing our new corporate headquarters. What are the differences between a net lease, a gross, lease, and a full-service lease?

These are all terms that are used to describe the manner in which services and expenses are paid in a landlord-tenant relationship. While the terms are used freely in commercial real estate transactions, there are actually no agreed-upon exact definitions of each. You should be concerned with the total cost of occupancy, so it is crucial to sort out what services are included in the rent, and incorporating the cost of those that are not. The following are the generally accepted definitions of these terms:

A net lease refers to a base rent that is being paid solely for the real estate, and does not include payments for real estate taxes, utilities, insurance, and any other operating expenses. A good way to remember the basis of a net lease is to equate it with the mortgage payment of an owned property. If you own a property, your mortgage payment is generally due once a month, just a like net rent, but you are also responsible for tax payments, insurance, all operating costs and even the landscaping! A net lease is similar. The rent paid to the landlord is simply compensation for his investment and risk in the real estate, and no more. The so-called triple net lease (usually encountered with single-occupant buildings) puts the entire burden of these expenses upon the tenant, in addition to the net rent that is paid.

A gross lease, on the other hand, usually incorporates some of the operating expenses (almost always real estate taxes) in the rent that is paid to the landlord. The gross lease may or may not include building insurance or common area maintenance (CAM). The tenant must take it upon himself to inquire as to exactly what is included in the gross rent that is being quoted. On Long Island, for example, CAM and building insurance can easily add an additional $0.60 a square foot to the quoted price if they are not included in the gross rent.

Full service leases are almost exclusively encountered in office buildings. They have, as the name implies, a rent that supposedly incorporates all of the tenant's cost of occupancy. A typical full service rent will include the base rent, real estate taxes, insurance, CAM, heating, air-conditioning, cleaning, and rubbish removal. A "full service plus electric" adds an additional charge to the tenant rent for tenant electric use (lights and outlets).

The definitions for these terms are hazy, and by no means universal. It is therefore incumbent for you to compare alternative properties and their prices with a full understanding of the total cost of occupancy. It is important that you ask the necessary questions and dig as deep as necessary to fully itemize the expenses. This is the only way a true economic understanding of the real estate alternatives or pricing can be made.

Choosing An Air Conditioner - Part I


Air conditioning has become the norm in hot and humid climates. Almost all offices and many middle class homes have starting installing air conditioning in their homes. Air conditioners are essential to improve working conditions. This in turns helps to improve productivity of office workers. Many industries, factories, laboratories etc. too need air conditioning for comfort or because the process needs it.

Depending on the size of the room and total area needing air conditioning, some decisions have to be made for the air conditioner to be installed. The usual choice for a home may be window or split air conditioning. Central air conditioning may be choice for very large homes, offices and factories.

Cost can be one big factor we need to consider when making a choice. But it would also be handy to know some technical information like tonnage of the air conditioning, power consumption and other mechanical features as well.

Let's examine some of the technical data we ought to acquire to get your money's worth, when buying an air conditioner.

First and foremost you need to your budget. Secondly you should know the size of the room or area of the house or office if you wish to cool part or whole area. This helps to ascertain the tonnage of the air conditioner you require. The price of the air conditioner increases with the increase in tonnage. Normally for window or split tonnage of air conditioners available are from 0.60, 0.75, 1, 1.5 and 2 tons. One question the store will ask you which brand or manufacturer you prefer. Depending on the brand, your price will vary. Sometimes there are even assembled air conditioners available from the local maintenance workshop, which may turn out to be cheaper though not entirely reliable.

It is no secret that the cooling capacity varies in direct proportion to the air conditioner tonnage. So how do you measure cooling capacity? Cooling capacity is measured in KCal/hour or BTU/hour and the greater the number, the more powerful is the unit. Cooling capacity of an air conditioner of one ton is 3000 KCal/hour or 12000 BTU/hour. Guidelines given by manufacturers indicate that area and tonnage of machine. A 0.75-ton machine is suitable for 35 sq. ft. area, one-ton machine for 90 to 110 sq. ft. area, 1.25-ton machine for 115 to 140 sq. ft. area, 1.50-ton machine for 150 to 170 sq. ft. area, 1.75-ton machine for 180 to 220 sq. ft. and so on. A better way is to divide the square feet of your room by 600 to get the correct tonnage.

It would be helpful to your dealer if you give some details. Other than room size, you could tell him the number and size of windows, the direction the room faces, how much shade your room gets, the thickness of walls and type of roof, type of insulation the room has and the number of appliances in the room like computers. Such details will enable your dealer to advise about the best type, tonnage and number of air conditioners to be installed.

You need to be guard that you do not select a lower tonnage simply to save on cost. Lower tonnage can reflect in higher bills, which will eventually hurt your pocket in the long term.

It is important to ensure that the power supply in your home is sufficient to run the machine. Your authorised electrician can advise you on the power supply angle. You should also get him to check the wiring. If required, separate wiring and heavy-duty electric plug connection should be provided to install the air conditioner.

The efficiency of your machine can be measured with the help of Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER). EER helps you to determine how much it costs of run each unit. Units with higher EER are more expensive, but consume less power and turn out cheaper in the long run.

What Is Was Like to Be Aboard an Aircraft Carrier


When I was at the squadron, my commanding officer, asked me if I would like to be his Yeoman, and fly up the Bremerton, Washington, to sail back on the carrier. I had never been on an aircraft carrier before, and my skipper knew that I had ship board experience, as most of the other Yeoman, did not have any. He told me to pick another Yeoman that wanted to go with me, so I asked Debbie if she wanted to go too, and she said, "Yes."

We all had our stuff ready, and on the airplane. We took off the ground, in an airplane that was headed for Bremerton, Washington. When we were getting closer to the airport, we were told, over the loud speaker, that this was going to be, the first time an airplane of this size, had ever landed at the small private airport, we were going to land at. All of a sudden, it seemed like everyone on the plane started to wonder, if we were going to crash, when we landed, or run out of runway, and hit stuff.

As the plane came down, it immediately came to a screeching sound, as they had tried to lock up the brakes. We slid down the whole runway, and came to the very end of it. We were lucky I guess. There were already fire engines, and ambulances, there waiting, just in case something happened.

My commanding officer, told me that the admiral was not on board the carrier, and the chief of staff was not there either. Only the CO and XO of the aircraft carriers, and my skipper, were the highest guys on board right now.

When we got on board the aircraft carrier, it was the first time I had ever been on one, and I always wondered what they were like. The ship was just so huge when you walked up the gangway, and across the deck, and into the airplane hangar section, of the ship. Inside, it is so gigantic looking, that it just looks like you are in a super sized warehouse, and you are not on a boat. The hangar bays, inside the belly of the ship, was enormous, in size. It seemed to take forever to go from one place, to another, on the ship. It was like the size of a 10 story shopping mall.

The first time we were out to sea, I heard the loudest sound, go threw out the ship, and I could even feel the aircraft carrier move a bit, it seemed. I thought, "What the hell was that?" We must of just hit another ship, or rock or something, I thought. It turns out, it was the catapult, which is a long wire cable, that is just like a rubber band, that they pull back, and it shoots the airplane right off the carriers flight deck, at a super fast speed, to get it airborne quickly and fast.

It is the loudest thing you will hear, and it goes on almost constantly, while you are aboard the ship. The guys that get carrier duty, they are some tough sailors, if you ask me. Give me a destroyer any day of the week. You can know all the guys pretty much, from department to department, on a destroyer, but an aircraft carrier, with over 5,000 people on it, it is just too big, if you ask me, but it is very amazing, to watch things in operation.

It seemed like each time you had to do something, it was always on the other end of the ship. When you walk around on the ship, you are always walking, and every 20 feet or so, you have to raise your feet, to get threw water tight compartment doors, even if it is a long hallway, there will be a lot of doors you go threw, and each time you lift your legs up, you have to lower your head each time also, so you don't hit your forehead on the water tight doors. That is what makes sinking a ship, so hard to sink.

It might have 1,000 rooms, or compartments as they are called, and each door has a rubber seal, and metal handles, they call dogs, that you physically tighten down, when you want to make the room air and water tight. Now if you closed all the water tight doors on the ship, and most of them just stay open during regular working hours, and nothing else is going on, it would be very hard to make it go underwater, even if part of the ship got blown up.

It would be very hard to sink a ball, for example, if it was filled with hundreds of tiny little air bubbles. So many air bubbles, that it would just keep it afloat, even if you tore out the sides, or bottoms of the ship. Well that is what we all hoped anyway.

Since my commanding officer was the highest ranking officer on board, he was also in charge of the other squadrons while he was on board. Me and Debbie, had a job, to set up a message center, and just keep the skipper informed, of all the confidential and secret messages that came in, and keep the messages organized. Really, there was not much work to do at all, while we were out to sea.

I did a lot of reading, because waiting for a message to come in from radio, might come only once every 30 minutes. And to take the message, when they came in, and organize it into a binder, was not that hard. The skipper was not that busy either.

Me and Debbie decided to split the work load, she could work in the day time, and I would work in the night time. I did not want to work in the day time, because it would be more full of officers in the day time, and the evening would be less hectic, and besides, since Debbie was a pretty yeoman, no one was going to give her, very much work to do. They did not have any regular sleeping quarters for her, so they set her up in the captain's inboard cabin, with some other girls, that were on board. At that time, the carriers were not set up for ladies on board, so they would not really make her do anything hard, but I'm sure she was getting a lot of looks, with over 5,000 guys on board, and maybe 10 girls.

While one of the evenings the skipper was in the room, we were working out of, I told him about how I had given my truck to this car lot, that said they take over your payments, and your vehicle will be paid off. Well, right before I left for this trip, the bank had called me, and said I had missed my truck payment. I told them I sold the truck to a car lot, that makes the payments. They said they never got it, and I was still responsible.

I drove down to where I thought my truck had been put up for sale again, in San Diego, and the business was totally gone. I could not believe it, I immediately had that bad feeling in my stomach. I walked around, and found a person at the building. I asked them, "What happened to the car lot?" He said they were 3 months behind on their rent, and moved out in the middle of the night.

My skipper told me, "When we get back to San Diego, you take some time off, and take care of your truck." He told me when he was first starting out, he had gotten taken on the first house he had ever bought, and he could understand what I was going threw. He was a really nice captain, and a super guy.

I finally did find my truck, and the company I had given it to, had sold it to another man, that was retired from the Navy. Lucky enough for me, the Navy guy was an honest guy. The car lot, had charged him $1,500 for a down payment, and then he was supposed to send them the truck payments, but after I told him what had happened, and that it was still my truck, we worked it out, where he sent me the payments each month, until the end of the payments, and then I gave him the title to it. I got lucky he was an honest guy.

In the office we were working in, we took two other officers with us. A woman lieutenant legal officer, and another lieutenant commander, that was a male, and also presumed to be gay, from all the guys back at the squadron anyway. This guy was a weasel. The skinniest officer I had ever seen, and he just talked so lady like.

Back then, you could smoke a cigarette, just about anywhere you wanted to on the ship, and I was the only one that smoked in the office. The lady legal officer, we brought with us, was not to well at all, the majority of the whole trip back to San Diego, so she was not around much. She had the worst case of sea sickness, so I would guess she had never been to sea before, on a ship.

The aircraft carrier has about 5,000 guys on it, it was Hugh. I don't think I would ever want to be stationed on a ship with that many people. I had spent a lot of time on a ship with 1,300 people, and that seemed like a lot, you could not know most of those people. On the destroyer, that had around 300 people on it, that was nice, they called that the Cadillac of ships, because it was designed with the enlisted guys in mind. It was even named after an enlisted medical corpsman.

On the aircraft carrier, the ship was designated into three areas. There was the regular area of the ship, where all your shops, offices, storage rooms, and just about everything else, and was open to everyone, to come and go as they pleased. Up above, a few more levels, was called, "Officer Country". This is where all the officers have their wardroom, staterooms and pretty much work out of that area, if they are not down in their departments, below.

Enlisted were not supposed to go up there, unless you were on business. Above Officer's Country, was a place called, "Flag Country", this was a part of the ship, just for the admiral, CO, XO, the admirals Chief of Staff, and any other officers, the admiral wanted to have stay there, while out to sea.

Both of my first two ships, had Officer's Country, but I never heard of Flag Country before, and even the officers were not supposed to go into Flag Country.

When I was sitting in the message room we had set up one night, the skipper from my squadron was in the office, and we were talking. He asked me if I wanted to see how the admiral lives, since he was not on board, and my skipper, who was a full bird captain, was using the chief of staff's quarters.

He took me up there, and it is really cool and comfortable, from the air conditioning. He showed me around their staterooms, offices, bathrooms, lounge, kitchen and eating areas. Boy, if the guys down in engineering, or flight deck operations, could see how the admiral, and all these other big brass boys live, they would not wonder any longer, why they like to go out to sea all the time.

It is just like something Donald Trump would set up for himself or something. The admiral's dining table, was about 25 feet long. He had a couple of nice long brown leather couches, big screen TV, full size bed, full size bathroom, complete kitchen with private chef, all compliments of the Navy. Sure you could watch a war training film on that big screen TV, but you could also watch any other kind of movie, and I'm sure they did.

The admiral also had a nice helicopter he had made up for himself. It was more of a personal looking helicopter, on the inside, to me anyway. He had it all redone, with different fabrics, and it looked expensive looking. It would be used by him, to fly around from ship to ship, when the battle group was out in the ocean, and he would also let the chaplain and others use it. I was told, that it was made, so that it could be put back together quickly, in time of war. It looked like a limo helicopter to me, but I'm sure the admiral earned it.

Freon Leak Repair - Air Conditioner


A freon leak repair kit may be the answer to the problem of freon leaks in your air conditioner that keep costing you money every cooling season. One of the biggest headaches people have with air conditioners is the system losing refrigerant though a small leak in the system. Larger leaks are typically easier to find in an air conditioning system because the will leave evidence such as an oil stain, a hole or crack in a coil, and in some cases when trying to add refrigerant you may even here the hissing sound of the freon escaping.

Larger freon leaks will most likely need to be addressed by an air conditioning service technician. They may have to solder cracks or holes in line and even replace evaporator or condenser coils. If your system loses all the freon do to a larger leak it will need to be evacuated to remove any moisture and none condensing gases from the system. This is done by putting a vacuum pump on the system that sucks all the contaminant's out. If this is not done your system will not function properly even after recharging it. Many times when you have a smaller leak in your system the technician will spend time looking for a leak that can not be found and just add freon to the air conditioner only to have it leak out again by the next cooling season. This can end up costing you hundreds of dollars every year or two. The other problem with just adding freon is that before your air conditioner gets so low that you realize it your energy costs will be very high to run a system that is not fully charged.

A simple and effective method to address smaller freon leaks is a freon leak repair kit that contains the hose, valve and sealant need to simply do the job your self in just minutes. Now keep in mind this product is mainly for residential and commercial air conditioners that have leaks that lose the charge over a year or more. Using it is very basic, you simply clip the hose and access fitting onto the larger black or suction line at the condenser or outdoor unit and run the air conditioner. The compressor will then suck the sealant into the system and seal any small leaks though out the entire system. This product when used according to the instructions on the can is safe for your system with most types of refrigerants and can be very effective. The cans in the kit are sized to be used on a systems up to five tons. This should cover most residential applications and many small commercial ones do to the fact the there are two cans in the kit totaling 10 tons of cooling if needed. You can check the size of your air conditioner by the make, model and serial number with an online search. Most homes under 4000 square feet will have an air conditioner less that five tons.

So if your tired of paying an air conditioning contractor hundreds of dollars every cooling season to simply add freon to you system that should not be leaking, check out the freon leak repair kit at www.mainsupplies.com go to " Freon Leak Repair Kit" under shop by category to purchase.

The Positive Qualities of a Portable Air Conditioning Unit


When I think of air conditioning I can think of two things. One would be central air because that is the type of air conditioning that I have now. However, when I was growing up, we did not have central air. We had one of those big, bulky air conditioning units that you stuck in the window. Well nowadays things have changed and technology just continues to grow and progress. air conditioning units have now changed to the point that there are even portable air conditioners. What could be some of the advantages to having a portable unit be?

For one thing, portable air conditioners are, obviously, smaller and more compact. They are not as bulky as systems used to be. They also have the ability to be moved around easily. Since they are smaller, they are also lighter in weight so it is not nearly the hassle to move it around as it would be a window unit. Another advantage is that with the petite size it can be easily stored or stowed in a spot where it is less likely to be noticed. Everyone knows that when you live in a smaller space there is not nearly as much room to store things, so having the ability to stow this unit away when not needed because it is smaller is definitely a pro.

Another plus to having the portable air conditioner is that even though it is smaller, as mentioned above, it pushes out the same amount of air that the rest of the units do. The window and wall mounted units are making the same amount of air cool as the much smaller portable unit. Just like the old saying, don't judge a book by it's cover, you can't judge an air conditioning unit by its size. These units are just as capable of cooling off somewhat large areas as the larger units are.

Other benefits of having a portable unit are that they use less electricity as well as have less maintenance checks. The highest points in electricity bills are in the dead of winter with heating bills and in the height of summer with air conditioning bills. The fact that portable units use less electricity is something that has caught many customers' eyes. The reason there are less maintenance checks with the portable air conditioning systems is because there are not as many parts inside the unit which can lead to malfunctions or breaking.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Floor Standing Air Conditioners - 4 Things To Check When Buying Portable AC Unit Online


If you are looking into buying a portable floor standing air conditioner online, then in this article you will find advice on four points to check to make sure your purchase will be a good one and hassle free. The important points to look for when buying floor standing air conditioning are: venting requirements, portability, noise, and power. When you are finished reading you will have a better idea of what to look for when purchasing a portable AC unit online.

Venting requirements

It is important to know beforehand what vents go in and out of the unit you are intending to purchase. When two vents are required to bring the outside air in and out of the unit, and you don't have a window in the room you are intending to cool, you have a problem. When you are buying online, make sure it is clear from the description how many vents or hoses the unit has.

Portability

Floor standing air conditioners are normally quite portable. They usually include a set of four caster wheels. If these are not pictured in the image on the product page, look into the product description. If it is important for you to have unit available in several spaces, make sure the wheels are included with your free standing AC unit.

Noise

The noise levels are often subjective, and seldom published in the product descriptions of portable ac units. However, getting a quiet portable AC is important for most people. After reading product description carefully, the next place to look for any indicators of excessive noise would be in the customer reviews of these portable air conditioners. Quiet operation is often mentioned and praised. The floor standing air conditioners, unlike the window units, or the through-the-wall units, are not embedded, or installed anywhere, so any noise indications would have to be coming from the design or building of the floor standing air conditioner unit. Check customer reviews carefully.

Cooling power

Normally, the suitable cooling power requirements for a room air conditioner BTU are 35 times the square footage. There is a big caveat that you must attach to portable free standing ac unit models with this calculation. First off, many air coolers, or swamp coolers don't even publish the BTU numbers, as all they do is shift the heat from one place inside the room to another. For single hose portable AC units, the BTU numbers may be correct, but you will hardly ever get the full benefit of the cooling power due to the constant mixing of the new hot air coming in and mixing with the existing cooled air. So even if the BTU number might seem sufficient for the room, it may not satisfy you because of the ineffectiveness of cooling the air inside the room. The only portable AC unit for which the BTU calculation above (35 times the square footage) applies, is the dual hose floor standing air conditioner. When you pick the right BTU of the dual hose floor standing unit, you are virtually guaranteed the effective cooling and much climate comfort in your room.

Industrial HVAC System Design and Use


HVAC systems provide approximately thirty percent of the energy used by manufacturing companies and are common for small business and home use as well. A good air system design not only cools a building but reduces energy consumption, improves air quality, and is not harmful to the environment. The word HVAC stands for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning. An HVAC system for an industrial building can have different combinations of heating and cooling devices.

These systems can include a boiler, furnace, heat pump, rooftop unit, or electric heat. Common cooling systems include rooftop units, heat pumps, chillers, and basic air conditioning units.

Commercial HVAC installation varies depending on the design of the system. For this reason, installation need to always be performed by an industrial air conditioning service that is familiar with many designs and industrial type buildings. Some HVAC designs are more complex while others are very simple. A basic HVAC system is often used for a single zone in an industrial plant. Modifications are performed to create an effective system for multi-plants and large areas.

In a basic industrial HVAC system, air is brought in from an air intake located on the top or side of the building. The air is forced through a damper by atmospheric pressure that regulates how much air is taken in. Air that has already run through the system is combined with the outside air. This air mixture is then run through a filter that removes large particles such as dust, leaves, and bugs. A second filter takes care of smaller particles before the air goes through a fan. Air leaves the fan and is heated or cooled by coils. A drain pan collects any condensation from the coils and the air is sent through the ductwork to cool or heat the building. It is then returned by air registers to be mixed with new air or sent out of the building.

Three main types of air conditioners are commonly used in commercial HVAC installation. An industrial HVAC system has other primary functions whereas a regular air conditioner's main function is to make a space comfortable. Direct expansion coolers consist of three components including window units, heat pumps, and packaged units. Units may be located on the rooftop and air is cooled when it passes over the coils. Chilled water systems have a refrigeration machine that cools water that is used by a coil to cool the air. Finally, evaporative coolers combine hot air with a damp surface to eliminate heat in dry climates. This action causes the moisture to evaporate and decrease air temperature.

HVAC systems in an industrial environment can become very complex and it is extremely important to know what is needed before installation. Using an industrial air conditioning service that has experience in these types of setups can be very helpful and ensure you get a quality installation. A bad installation can result in higher energy costs, bad air quality, and insufficient working conditions. These types of problems can decrease productivity and make daily operations next to impossible in some cases.

The History of the Air Conditioner


The air conditioner is one of the most useful machines we have in the modern world. In temperate climates the control it offers over the temperature in offices and homes can be essential for the creation of a comfortable working or living environment. But how did the modern air conditioner come about?

The history of the air conditioner is twinned with that of refrigeration. As such the first developmental step can be seen as the discovery that liquid ammonia could chill the air around it, helping to cool foods and also create ice. It was a scientist named John Gorrie that first used a compressor to create the first ice cubes.

Air conditioning units were first developed for industrial applications and cooling processes rather than focussing on the creating a comfortable personal solution to warm days. It was at this time that the "father of Modern Air Conditioning" Willis Haviland Carrier invented the first electronic air conditioner just after the turn of the century in 1902.

The invention of this first conditioner was for uses within the printing industry, specifically controlling the environment within the printing plant, reducing humidity so that uniformity could be applied to the paper size and ink consistency. As a result efficiency in the plant was improved.

As a result of this success the Carrier Air Conditioning Company was formed with the ultimate objective of ensuring better productivity in various types of workplaces. Since this time the Carrier Company has grown to become one of the largest manufacturers of air conditioners in the world.

A major step forward in the development of air conditioners occurred in 1928. When a scientist name Thomas Midgely Jr, discovered that Freon could be used in air conditioning and refrigeration systems. This was so important because previously gases such as ammonia, propane and methyl chloride were used, all of which could be considered dangerous due to their flammability and toxicity. The types of gases were changed once again in the latter part of the twentieth century due to the harmful effects CFCs and HCFCs were having on the environment, subsequently environmentally friendly processes and materials are now a major focus for the industry.

Today air conditioners are used extensively in the commercial, industrial and domestic spheres. It is the early work of pioneers such as John Gorrie and Willis Haviland Carrier that has led to the advanced air conditioning technology we have in the modern age.

How To Find A Reliable Air Conditioner Repair Service


Today air conditioning is a must-have in most households; and with it you find that you will need a reliable air conditioning repair company you could call for maintenance or repair. How do you identify the best air conditioning service? Are there any particular criteria that would point you in the right direction?

While we are talking about air condition repair, it is important to realize that you could completely do without it. If you insulate the house properly, and ensure it has enough ventilation - you could do away with your air conditioner and feel healthier. You would also be doing your bit for the dying planet.

In the meantime, check out the following factors before you decide on which service you call for your air conditioner:

1. Reviews of the company - the first and most important of all are the reviews this company obtained. The reviews would tell you whether they do their work well or not for only the customers who have booked the services of this company can leave reviews. Be aware if you have raving reviews all through. This could be false. If you have any doubts, check on the internet for more reviews or testimonials from previous customers - if there is any real complaint this company is conspiring to bury, you will find it. By and large, the negative reviews are almost always true.

2. Referrals - check around and ask people who have air conditioners where they have their machines services or repaired. Such referrals are worth their weight in gold, for they would give the true story. You can very safely go for such recommendations for these would point you to reliable service.

3. Company service - you could look up the service station of the company to which your air conditioner belongs. For example, Carrier Company would most definitely send their people for maintenance and repair to your home if you have a Carrier air conditioner. It would be wise in such a case to sign maintenance and extended warranty contract with them so you would no longer worry about your air conditioner.

4. Private mechanic - every town has its own handyman. This is most applicable if you live in a close neighborhood, which very soon learn to depend upon a local talented person who would be available any time of the night and day. In case, there is one person like this, it would be very good to cultivate him for their services would often be a small fraction of the cost of what the service people would charge, while the work would be as qualitative.

5. DIY projects - take out the manual of the air conditioner and you will find that most of the maintenance you can do yourself without any outside help. Additionally, if you look carefully at the technical explanations of the machine and troubleshooting advice, most of the problems you can repair yourself. A do-it-yourself project will give you plenty of satisfaction and you will save a lot of money.

Air Conditioning Service And Its Significance


We all rely more on the machines than the humans, we cannot deny the importance of machines in our life. It is always very frustrating when a machine is either not working properly or is out of order. There are many examples such as, we all love our cars but when they break down, many of us kick them and sometimes curse them as well and this may become more frustrating with the heating and cooling system. It is true that machines have made humans more sensitive. There were times when there was no heating and cooling system and people were surviving but as we are surrounded by the machines and we are addicted to them so we always prefer the air conditioning buses, trains, subways, cars and home. To keep the air conditioning going it is necessary to have air conditioning service.

There are many companies providing these services, some of these companies are also manufacturing the air conditioners. There are some other companies who provide the services of installing and servicing. The mechanism of an air conditioner usually require a service once a year, the engineers or technicians make the necessary checks for the leakages, examine the compressor functionality and check the benign or any other compressed liquefied gas levels. They also clean the air filters, services for a residential require mostly these tasks, but for industrial service it always depends on the unit. In these days, arranging an air conditioning service appointment is not complicated as most of the companies are working 24 hours and 7 days a week and are very promising regarding the service time.

Many manufacturing companies also provide the warranty for their product, which normally lasts in years. There are many other marketing promotions; some heating and cooling system companies are providing the free service facility for a certain time period. The portable air conditioners also require the service but most of the tasks can be performed by an individual, however in some conditions you may require to consult an engineer. The portable air conditioners are easy to configure, it is recommended to always double check the machine before operating it.

Scheduling air conditioning service on time will allow you to enjoy more comfort of the cool air and cleanness in the room. It is always good to schedule a service right after the winter or when the weather is not so hot that you need the heating and cooling system. It may also cost you less as the service companies will not be very busy in their work as mostly companies charge according to the season. The modern air conditionings have different air filters and are equipped with the air clean technology. They also have dehumidifies system installed. These air conditioners bring more freshness to the room air and also keep it clean and cool. You feel more active and fit while sitting in room have the similar air conditioning.

In these days the air conditioning is not limited to the buildings and in planes. Almost every car has the air conditioning installed in them. This also made travelling easy and has brought more luxury in driving. In these days you can hires the technicians for air conditioning service through internet.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Solutions for Dehydrated Skin


If your skin lacks radiance and feels "tight" it is likely that it is dehydrated. The appearance of fine lines due to loss of elasticity and flexibility are other key signs of dehydrated skin. Moisture evaporates readily through the skin, and if we don't stop this occurrence our skin looses its ability to protect against the outside environment leading to even more moisture loss and in the long term, actual skin damage due to poor cellular integrity.

Wind, sun and pollution as well as internal factors such as diet, nutrient levels and hereditary all play a role in the determining the health of our skin as an effective barrier. The very outer layer of our epidermis (top skin layer) is the real protective layer of the skin. It is made up of flattened dead keratinocytes. These dead skin cells are regularly shed and replaced by deeper skin layers moving up to the surface. The glue that keeps the keratinocytes together is formed by lipids such as fatty acids ceramides and cholesterol. This layer forms a waterproof barrier that reduces "Trans Epidermal Water Loss" or TEWL, ensuring adequate moisture content for the skin. It is this barrier that protects against chemicals, irritants and micro-organisms. A deficiency in these epidermal lipids causes the water retention powers of the epidermis to be significantly reduced. Moisture evaporation and skin dehydration generally follow.

One section of the skin's waterproof moisture barrier is slightly acidic and as such is know as the acid mantle. The acidity of this layer is due to secretions from the sebaceous and sweat glands and its function is once again protection but in particular stopping the growth of bacteria and fungi. It also assists with maintaining the "glue" that keeps the outer layer skin cells bound together. If acid pH of the skin is disrupted it becomes more alkaline and starts to lose its protective properties.

It is the balance of sebum (skin oil) and perspiration that keeps the skin healthy. Skin dehydration occurs when the water and oils that form part of the protective layer are out of balance. This can happen for a number of reasons:

1. Evaporation of moisture through the skin. Factors that promote moisture evaporation include dry air (ie lack of humidity or airconditioning), wind, prolonged water exposure (swimming in pools or long showers).

2. Damage to the waterproof barrier or disruption of the acid mantle leaving the skin open to issues such as dehydration, roughness, infection, redness and irritation. Synthetic foaming agents such as sodium laurel sulphate are a significant cause of acid mantle disruption.

3. Low water and healthy fat intake - adequate water intake is required to maintain cellular fluid. Essential fatty acids from good fats help maintain the fatty membrane surrounding the cell, holding in moisture and nutrition.

4. Ageing. As we age, there is a reduction in the water holding capacity of the skin as well as the production of natural oils.

The first thing to do to combat skin dehydration is to remove any factors that directly contribute to moisture loss or skin damage. Avoid long, hot showers, open the windows instead of relying on air-conditioning and stop using products that contain sodium laurel sulphate. Repairing these factors will slow down water loss. Dietary factors will be addressed below but certainly ensure you are getting enough water each day which will help increase water content.

The next step is to repair the waterproof barrier and restore the skin's ability to attract and retain water. Ideally any skin care product applied will have a number of roles which include delivering nutrition which assists with repair, maintenance of the acid mantle and moisture barrier and a softening effect achieved by attracting water from the external environment. To achieve this, the ingredients must be able to be absorbed properly by the skin. Water based ingredients may have a temporary plumping effect on the surface of the skin but this effect will not last as the ingredients haven't been absorbed into the deeper layers of the skin. Lipids and oil soluble ingredients are more readily absorbed by the skin as are ingredients that have a smaller particle size.

Most cosmetic products on the market don't actually help the skin repair damage to the barrier or acid mantle. They act as emollients, reducing water loss from the skin by covering it with a protective layer. Effectively they keep water in the skin. Common emollient ingredients include butters, waxes and oils as well as products such as petroleum and lanolin. While emollients are helping to reduce the problem, they aren't actually remedying the underlying cause. The other issue with some emollient ingredients is that they may actually cause more problems.

Petroleum products such as mineral oil sit on the surface of the skin, stopping the skin from breathing and have the potential to block pores. By contrast natural waxes and oils allow the skin to breath. Some of the heavier waxes or butters may still block pores however natural carrier and essential oils are unlikely to have this effect.

When it comes to ingredients that achieve this end, our natural pantry is rich in ingredients that can help restore skin hydration rather than just masking the problem. Many natural carrier oils such as Rosehip, Sweet Almond, Tamanu, Marula, Jojoba and Evening Primrose Oil are readily absorbed by the skin. They have the ability to nourish the skin, provide an effective barrier to water loss and reduce TEWL.

Oils such as Rosehip also contain essential fatty acids (EFAs) that promote the repair of the cellular membrane, allowing skin cells to retain more water. Ironically if the skin cells are deficient in EFAs, it can cause the sebaceous glands to become overactive, producing more oil. With an EFA deficiency, the skin will often be oily through the T-zone and dry across the cheeks. As long as the appropriate natural carrier oils are used, they can have a balancing effect, reducing both oily and dry skin conditions. Ideal choices for skin that is both oily and dry include Rosehip and Sweet Almond.

Many carrier oils such Marula, Rosehip and Boabab also contain essential skin vitamins such as A, E and C that promote healthy cellular function. As antioxidants, the vitamins also help slow skin ageing.

What you do on the "inside" also has an impact in skin hydration. Reducing factors that have a diuretic effect such as alcohol and coffee will increase cellular hydration. The other key issue is ensuring adequate good fats in the diet. Good fats such as essential fatty acids (EFA's) ensure the cell membrane remains flexible. This allows the cell to excrete toxins and cellular waste products and hold onto nutrients and water. EFAs also help to keep skin flexible and hydrated and promoting skin healing. Deep Sea fish are among the best source of EFAs including tuna, salmon, anchovies and sardines. Other good sources of EFA's include avocado, nuts & seeds, flaxoil and Evening Primrose Oil.

Air Conditioning (HVAC) Ducting Explained - A Complete Guide For Any Air Conditioning Buyer


There are heaps of different types of air conditioning ducting available on the market. Below is a list of the most common forms of ducting with a description of what they are used for.

Reverse Cycle Air Conditioning Ducting

Reverse cycle (refrigerative) air conditioners use duct that should be insulated with at least 2 inches of material surrounding the core. Speak with you air conditioning salesman to ensure this is the case. Duct insulated with less than 2 inches will lose it's cool/heat quicker.

Evaporative Air Conditioning Ducting

Evaporative ducted systems usually use duct with only 1 inch of insulation surrounding the core. This is because the air in an evaporative air conditioner is extremely fast moving and therefore there is little time for the heating/cooling effect to be removed. Evaporative ducting is generally bigger in diameter than reverse cycle ducting.

Acoustic / Whispaflex Air Conditioner Ducting

Acoustic ducting (or whispaflex as it is also known) is often used in the return air of a ducted reverse cycle system. The inner core of acoustic ducting contains many tiny holes that reduce the noise inside the ducting. The return air grille on a reverse cycle system can be quite noisy so this ducting helps reduce that noise. Once again it pays to ask the salesman to see if this ducting will be included in your system. If it is not included in your quote and noise is a major concern for you, consider asking for acoustic ducting to be included.

Air Conditioning Ducting Insulation Types

Air conditioning ducting can be insulated using a few different materials. These days polyester is a standard insulation material. Polyester is the same fiber as used in many people's pillows so it is quite a safe product. Fiberglass was also a common duct insulation type but less and less people are using it these days due to the high cost and the increased safety precautions needed to handle fiberglass products. All in all both types of insulation are more than adequate for residential duct work.

Air Conditioning Ducting Fire Retardancy

All ductwork should come with documents describing the products fire rating. In general most insulation acts as a fire retardant. Ask your air conditioning salesman for the documents to make sure that the duct you are buying conforms to the fire laws in your local area.

Warranties and Life Spans For Air Conditioning Ducting

Most ductwork will have a warranty aging from 5-10 years. Be wary of any manufacturer that does not offer this. After around 10 years ductwork starts to become quite aged. If you were to go up in your roof after this period, you would find the ductwork has become quite cracked and brittle. However, as long as you are still getting adequate airflow and the ducts are clean and unbroken you can still use the system. The biggest danger to ductwork is rodents like mice and rats who sometimes eat away the insulation and leave their waste in your ductwork.

Ductwork can also be a major source of illness. Bacteria can build up in ductwork over time that can make you and your family ill over long periods of time. There are products available however that you can place in your ducting to disinfect the system. You can also manually clean the inside of your ducting but this would be a long and arduous task. Perhaps consider simply replacing the ductwork around every 7-8 years if your health is a major concern.

So now you know the different types of air conditioning duct and what to look out for. Be sure to ask your air conditioning salesman what types of duct you will be getting with your air conditioning system.

Portable Heat Pump - The Best Air Conditioning Choice For Homeowners Who Live Alone


Do you live alone? Are you confident about your protection against the cold? Are you worried about heat stroke and all those allergens forming in during hot seasons? Well, you shouldn't! When you're alone, you should definitely invest in a good air conditioning system. When 'conditioning' is mentioned, it doesn't mean that you should get a machine that produces low temperature. It works to create heat too. For homeowners, such as yourself, getting a portable heat pump is a great way to regulate the air inside your home without spending too much.

When you live alone, you really have to make ends meet. Nevertheless, this doesn't mean that you shouldn't live in comfort. You can always splurge without spending thousands of dollars. That's where a portable heat pump enters the picture. When you're alone in your flat, you don't have the luxury to indulge too much on big heat pumps. For sure, you'll only be in one part of the apartment. The energy will be a waste. At least, with a portable one, you can control the areas being conditioned.

Because these appliances can convert cold air to warm air and vice versa, these are very convenient. Forget owning an air conditioner and a separate heater-this is a very expensive choice. You'll realize that you don't have to pay a high electric bill. Plus, with the proper care and maintenance you'll be able to extend the machine's lifespan for a couple of years more. Yet another advantage you can obtain from this is that these movable ones do not need any complicated installations. You can drag them around and it will work (provided that there's electricity, of course).

Remember, when you're alone you can't be picky. You should go with the most affordable choice and one of the best is to use a portable heat pump.

Get an Electric Radiant Infrared Heating Unit for That


If you are a builder, contractor, or a do-it-yourself person, you are probably considering options for green energy for heating applications. There are some green systems out there such as geothermal and hot water radiant heating, but they can be quite expensive with a complex installation. They are especially expensive if you only want to add heating to certain areas of a home or business.

Electric radiant infrared heat is a perfect solution for residential and commercial/industrial heating applications. If you want to add heating to an area in a warehouse or workstation to keep employees warm where they stand to do most of their tasks, a spot heating application using such a unit is a perfect choice. The unit would be a quartz tube radiant heater with a 60 degree reflective pattern mounted approximately 8 feet above the work area.

If you wanted to add heat to a home addition without buying a new larger furnace or inefficient baseboards a perfect solution would be a 1500 watt ceramic coated steel element made in a housing exclusively for residential use. Depending on the square footage of the addition or three-season room these units can be piggy-backed together and/or zoned on a thermostat or other power source. These units are a primary heat source for that space. No need to replace a perfectly good furnace or pay for additional tin work to run ducts between the walls.

What makes these units a green energy solution is that they do not consume natural gas. I understand that coal is consumed at the electric plant to generate the electricity that powers these units in the home. That is true. But that combustion occurs at a coal plant. Coal plants are undergoing constant regulation to be cleaner and more efficient.

There are also green technology power plants delivering clean power to homes and businesses. If those homes and businesses use electric radiant infrared technology you will have green power plants providing green energy to green heating technology.

Much like a furnace or HVAC system, these units are a capital improvement. Once installed the housings can last the lifetime of the structure and the elements can last 5 years, 10 years, even decades. These units are low maintenance; no moving parts, no air flow to kick up dust and dander, nothing to take apart and clean or service, just an occasional wipe down.

This type of heat is efficient in heating people first, objects second, and then the ambient air. Within minutes these units are at full power and anyone near them immediately feels the warmth. At the same time everything in the area of the unit begins to absorb the heat, and then re-radiate that heat which heats the ambient air in the room. And because the furniture, floor, and other objects are giving off absorbed warmth and energy, the recovery time to re-heat the room after a door or window has been opened is very short. This fast recovery saves energy, and energy cost money, so it is as much a money saver as it is a natural resource saver.

Heating Unit applications include:

Need to heat some work spaces to keep employees warm?
Need to melt snow and ice at your loading dock or around your facility?
Need to add illumination to that snow melt application?
Need to heat a foyer or entry way in your business?
Want to greet your employees or customers with great warmth as they enter your business?
Want to heat your deck or patio at your home or business?
Want to add heat to your shed, work space, or garage.
Want to use that three-season room in the winter?
Need to heat an addition?
Know a senior citizen who is always cold and needs more heat?
Need to heat patients and keep them warm in a hospital, nursing home, or medical facility?
Got smokers? Need to heat the designated smoking area?
Do your customers smoke? Want to keep them happy when they smoke outside?
Need a heat barrier to protect from a draft?

These heating units can solve all of these issues without the energy expense of natural gas or oil.

Kevin Owens

radiantheatusaonline.com

The Boeing 757


I

Increasing demand on existing Boeing 727 routes, which often eclipsed the capacity of even the stretched, -200 series version, coupled with advanced technology, dictated the need for either a larger variant of this venerable tri-jet or an altogether new design.

The first attempt, adopting the former approach, had featured a fuselage sufficiently stretched to accommodate 189 passengers and three refanned, higher-capacity Pratt and Whitney JT8D-217 engines, each developing 20,000 pounds of thrust. Designated the 727-300B, it first appeared at the 1975 Paris Air Show in model form. Despite initial interest from United Airlines, carriers had felt that it needed quieter, still-more advanced powerplants.

A fundamental redesign, retaining the 727's nose, forward fuselage, and t-tail, and designated "7N7," featured a further fuselage stretch and a new technology wing, mated, like the much smaller 737, to two pylon-mounted engines, of which the Pratt and Whitney JT10D-4, Rolls Royce RB.211-535, and General Electric CF6-32 had then been considered. Although it had been intended, like its inceptional counterpart, for one-stop transcontinental sectors, its wing contained sufficient fuel tank volume for eventual, long-range deployment.

Because widebody comfort had been well received by passengers on intercontinental routes, one iteration had briefly explored a wider fuselage cross section for twin-aisle, 180-passenger accommodation. The concept would have satisfied two needs: 1). It would have offered increased comfort, and therefore been more competitive with the then-pending Airbus Industrie A-300 on relatively short US domestic sectors, and 2). It would have avoided the excessively long fuselage needed to cater to any future capacity increases, obviating the requirement for long undercarriage struts to maintain proper take off rotation angles.
The envisioned width, however, had been too much of a payoff for these advantages, as evidenced by weak airline interest, since the weight and drag associated with a second aisle and only one more seat abreast had been impractical, and its cross-section, although wider than that of the 7N7, had still been too narrow to accept standard LD-3 baggage and cargo containers.

Reverting to its narrow body studies, Boeing proposed an advanced, large-capacity 727 which, by February of 1978, had featured its nose, cockpit, and fuselage cross-section, but had introduced a new wing and two turbofans for a 170-passenger complement, thus employing much of the commonality of the simultaneously-developed, twin-aisle 7X7 design. Redesignated "757," it would be Boeing's fifth major commercial jetliner to carry the seven-dash-seven model sequencing numbers, after the 707, 727, 737, and 747, all but the last of which had been narrow bodies.

Compared to the 727 it had been intended to replace, it had offered a 15-percent lower fuel consumption, yet its significant wing area inherently fostered weight, range, and capacity increases for any future derivatives.

In order to reduce development costs associated with its 767, the widebody, twin-aisle, twin-engined counterpart initially also intended for one-stop transcontinental routes, Boeing, where feasible, incorporated maximum commonality in the two aircraft and the types therefore shared the same forward nose sections, windscreens, quad-wheeled main undercarriage units, avionics, and flight deck systems. Indeed, the two aircraft, forming a new-generation of advanced narrow and widebody twinjets, would offer a common type rating, augmenting mixed-fleet flying of carriers which operated both types, and even the originally intended, 727-style t-tail had been deleted in favor of the conventional 767, low-wing configuration at the very end of the design phase, resulting in greater commonality with the 767 than the 727 it was intended to replace.

Launch orders, for 21 firm and 24 options and 18 firm and 19 options, were respectively placed by Eastern Airlines and British Airways on August 13, 1978, for Rolls Royce RB.211-535C-powered aircraft. Featuring a 196-passenger capacity in a six-abreast, 34-inch seat pitch configuration, the 757, with a 220,000-pound gross weight, was optimized for 2,000-nautical mile sectors, while an optional, 230,000-pound weight would increase range to 2,500 miles.

Structural weight reductions, which lowered seat-mile costs, were achieved with advanced composite and aluminum alloy construction, the former comprised of carbon-fiber-reinforced plastics used in the engine cowlings, ailerons, spoilers, elevators, and the rudder, and kevlar-reinforced plastics employed in the engine pylon fairings and the fin and tailplane tip fairings. Copper and zinc aluminum alloys were utilized in the wing skins, stringers, and lower spar beams.

The aircraft, in its initial 757-200 version, featured a 155.3-foot overall length.

The aluminum alloy, two-spar wing, whose center section passed continuously through the fuselage, offered a 124.10-foot span, a 1,994 square foot area, and five percent of dihedral, and shared a high degree of commonality with that designed for the 767, its aft-loaded profile delaying Mach drag rise. But it was thinner at its root juncture point with the fuselage and offered 25 as opposed to 32.5 percent of sweepback. Its traditionally higher drag had been counteracted by its standardly intended mission profiles, which, because of their shorter durations, entailed greater percentages of climb and descent cycles. It had a 7.82 aspect ratio, or ratio of length to width.

Lift was augmented by full-span, five-section leading edge slats and double-slotted trailing edge flaps, while roll control was provided by al-speed, outboard ailerons, themselves assisted by five-section spoilers. They could alternatively be deployed as speedbrakes in flight or lift dumpers on the ground, where two inboard spoiler panels could also be used.

Power, provided by two high bypass ratio turbofans pylon-mounted to the wing's leading edge underside, and whose diameter would not have been feasible with the 727's aft fuselage installation arrangement, resulted in bending movement relief.

The Rolls Royce RB.211-535C, the cropped fan version of the 42,000 thrust-pound RB.211-22B developed for the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar, employed composite pod construction to reduce weight and first ran on the 757 on January 23, 1982. The three-shaft, 37,400 thrust-pound powerplant had been chosen by launch customers Eastern and British Airways.

The more advanced RB.211-535E4, incorporating wide chord fan blades, high pressure module increases, and a common exhaust nozzle for the fan and core streams, offered an eight-percent fuel reduction in its cruise mode and a four-point pressure ratio increase, from 23:1 to 27:1, over its earlier -535C version. The 40,100 thrust-pound engine was certified on November 30, 1983 and first flew on the 757 prototype the following February.

The Pratt and Whitney PW2037, originally specified by American Airlines and Delta, had been the aircraft's second, and only other, powerplant. Initially designated JT10D, the two-shaft turbofan, inceptionally envisioned as a 26.700 thrust-pound engine when the program had been launched in February of 1972, had evolved into the current 37,000 thrust-pound turbofan whose high-pressure compressor efficiency had been improved with a smaller compressor coupled with higher core rotational speeds. First flying on the 757 prototype in March of 1984, it was certified for 37,600 pounds of take off thrust and had a bypass ratio of 5.8:1.

Fuel was carried in two wing-integral and one center section tank, with that stored in the outer tanks burned last in order to maintain wing bending movement relief. Capacity was 11,253 US gallons.

The conventional, low-wing tailplane, adopted very late in the 757's development program, facilitated an overall length reduction of 18 feet, yet resulted in a longer cabin than that of the 727 it replaced and improved ground maneuverability. The variable incidence, elevator-equipped horizontal tail, built up of full-span, light alloy torque boxes, had a 542-square-foot area, while the vertical structure, comprised of a three-spar, dual-cell, light alloy torque box, covered a 370 square-foot area.

The tricycle undercarriage featured a dual-wheeled, forward-retracting nose gear strut and two quad-wheeled, laterally-retracting units comprised of Dunlop or Goodrich wheels, carbon brakes, and tires.
The cockpit standardly featured two operating crew and one observer seat, while the cabin, at 118.5 feet long, 11.7 feet wide, and seven feet high, had sported a widebody look with large, Kevlar, individually-closable overhead storage compartments; a sculpted ceiling; recessed lighting; molded sidewalls; and slimline seats.

Numerous class, pitch, and density seating arrangements, again according to customer choice, were available. A 178-passenger complement, for instance, entailed 16 first class seats in a four-abreast, two-two, configuration at a 38-inch pitch and 162 economy class seats in a six-abreast, three-three, arrangement at a 34-inch pitch, while 208 passengers could be accommodated in a 12 first class and 196 economy class configuration, the latter at a 32-inch pitch. Single-class, high-density, and inclusive tour/charter densities, at minimum 29-inch pitches, encompassed 214, 220, 234, and 239 passengers, the latter of which exceeded the 727-200's maximum by 50 passengers and undercut the widebody 767-200's by an equal number.

Cabin access was provided by either three main passenger/servicing doors and two overwing emergency exits on either side or four main passenger/servicing doors on either side.

The two underfloor cargo holds, accessed by starboard side, lower-deck doors, offered 700 cubic feet of space in the forward compartment and 1,090 cubic feet in the aft one.

Boeing 757 systems included Honeywell-Vickers engine-driven hydraulic pumps and four Abex electric hydraulic pumps. An Allied-Signal GTCP331-200 auxiliary power unit (APU) provided ground power for air conditioning, lighting, and engine starts.

Full program approval had been received in March of 1979 and final assembly, like all previous narrow body jetliners, occurred in Renton, Washington, with the first metal cut on December 10 and the first major assembly taking place 13 months later, in January of 1981.

First rolled out on January 13, 1982, or five months after its widebody 767 counterpart, and taking to the skies for the first time on February 19, the 757-200 prototype (N757A) was flown by Test Pilot John Armstrong and powered by 37,400 thrust-pound RB.211-535C turbofans, completing a successful two-hour, 31-minute inaugural sortie, during which it had attained a 250-knot indicated air speed (IAS) before landing at Boeing''s Paine Field Flight Test Center in Everett. Despite having introduced the first CRT display-equipped, two-person cockpit, and having been the first Boeing design to have been launched with a foreign powerplant type, it had demonstrated simple handling characteristics.

The five aircraft used in the flight test program ultimately revealed that, in comparison to the design's original, 1979 specifications, that it had had a 3,650-pound lower operating weight, a 200-nautical mile greater range capability, and burned three percent less fuel.

FAA certified on December 21, 1982, the 757-200, Boeing's longest single-aisle twinjet, entered scheduled passenger service with Eastern Airlines the following January 1 on the Atlanta-Tampa and Atlanta-Miami routes, while British Airways, configuring its aircraft for 12 first and 174 economy class seats, took delivery of the type on January 25 and inaugurated it into service on February 9, from London-Heathrow to Belfast, Northern Ireland.

The first Pratt and Whitney PW2037-powered variant, first flying on March 14, 1984, had been delivered to launch customer Delta Air Lines seven months later, in October, the same month that Eastern received its first, improved powerplant example, fitted with the RB.211-535E4.

So powered, the aircraft, with 186 mixed-class passengers, had a 220,000-pound maximum gross weight and a 198,000-pound maximum landing weight, offering a coincident 2,820-mile range capability, although medium-range versions had a 230,000-pound weight and long-range examples featured 250,000-pound gross weights, in which case 3,820-mile sectors could be flown.

Although maturing DC-9, 727, and 737 routes had conceptionally dictated the need for the 757, its increasing gross weight and, hence range capability, permitted longer, trans- and intercontinental sector deployment, partially in response to rising fuel prices, and it often served, if not replaced, 767-200 services, thus complementing, before usurping, its twin-aisle counterpart. Both Delta and Eastern, for example, operated transcontinental segments from their Atlanta hubs, while USAir mimicked this pattern to Los Angeles and San Francisco from its similar Pittsburgh flight base. Ladeco operated intercontinental service from Santiago, Chile, to Miami and New York, while Canada 3000, Icelandair, and Air 2000 all operated scheduled and chartered transatlantic services.

II

Other than the initial 757-200 passenger version, Boeing offered several subvariants utilizing the same fuselage length and wingspan, although these sold in limited quantities.

The first of these, the 757-200PF Package Freighter, was developed for United Parcel Service (UPS) when it had placed 20 firm and 15 optioned orders for the Pratt and Whitney PW2037-powered aircraft on December 31, 1985. These featured a 134- by 86-inch, upward-opening, hydraulically-actuated main deck cargo door on the forward, left side; a smaller, 22- by 55-inch crew access door; a cargo loading system; a solid, sliding door-equipped barrier between the cockpit and the main deck freight bay; and the deletion of all passenger-related windows, galleys, and lavatories. First delivered to UPS on September 16, 1987, the twinjet, with a 240,000-pound maximum take off weight, offered 6,680 cubic feet of main and 1,830 cubic feet of lower deck volume, permitting up to 15 pallets to be carried in the former passenger space.
A modified version, the 757-200M Combi, retained the passenger facilities of the -200 and the cargo loading elements of the -200PF, enabling three pallets and 150 passengers to be simultaneously accommodated on the main deck. Although it had been available with a 250,000-pound high gross weight, only one, in the event, had ever been ordered, by Royal Nepal Airlines.

A conversion program, developed by Pemco Aeroplex in 1992, enabled carriers to modify existing passenger aircraft to mixed, quick-change, or all-cargo variants, with an 11,276 US gallon fuel capacity and maximum weights those of the -200PF.

The only military version, the C-32A, had been ordered by the US Air Force to replace its fuel-thirsty, outmoded, quad-engined VC-137s, and it had featured a 45-passenger interior. First flying from Renton on February 11, 1998, the aircraft, ultimately comprising a fleet of four, had been operated by the 89th Airlift Wing at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.

III

A representative, transatlantic 757-200 flight, operated by Icelandair from New York-JFK to Reykjavik, Iceland, is forthcomingly illustrated.

The aircraft scheduled to operate the daily, evening departure to Iceland, registered TI-FIH, had been powered by 40,100 thrust-pound Rolls Royce RB.211-535E4 turbofans and configured for 22 four-abreast, two-two, Saga business class, winged- and footrest-equipped seats and 167 six-abreast, three-three, economy class seats, all covered with subdued, blue upholstery. The 250,000-pound, high gross weight aircraft, with an 8,800-pound average cargo capacity, offered a 3,900-mile range.

Pushed back from Gate 21 at JFK's now-extant International Arrivals Building at 2050 abreast of a massive Korean Air 747-400 after a sweltering, 90-degree, early-summer day, the blue-trimmed, long-fuselaged 757-200, somehow reminiscent of the DC-8-63s it had replaced, but with only half the number of powerplants, was rendered an autonomous entity after towbar disconnection amidst the black dusk highlighted by the glow tracing the clouds on the western horizon.

The two-person, transitional-technology cockpit featured both the traditional analog dials and six advanced cathode ray tube (CRT) displays, the former comprised of an airspeed indicator, an altimeter, a vertical velocity indicator, a clock, and standby flight instruments, while the latter consisted of the electronic flight instrument system (EFIS), two electronic attitude and direction indicators (EADI), and two engine indication and crew alerting systems (EICAS), the latter located on the center panel. The electronic flight instrument system, subdivided into the attitude director indicator (ADI) and the horizontal situation indicator (HIS), provided aircraft attitude and positioning information by means of the CRT displays in seven colors.
The attitude director indicator, specifically, provided aircraft attitude and pitch and roll data, along with ground speed, autopilot, autothrottle, and fight direction modes, operating in conjunction with the horizontal situation indicator, which itself yielded aircraft track, wind speed and direction, lateral and vertical deviations, and waypoint estimated times, and could be used in four basic modes. The map mode, the first, generated weather radar returns in several scales, while the VOR mode provided the aircraft's position relative to its selected VOR course. The ILS mode yielded airplane relationship relative to its ILS localizer and glideslope, and the plan mode, the last of the four, displayed the desired portion of the flight plan with north located at the top of the screen.

The flight deck otherwise featured the standard control yokes; a center console between the pilots sporting the throttles, the flap lever, and the speedbrakes; and a console behind it with communication and navigation instrumentation.

Engine starting was achieved by turning the respective turbofan's roof panel-located rotary ignition switch to one of its four start modes-"GRN," "FLT," "AUTO," or "CONT"-after which the switch on the quadrant behind the throttles was flipped to channel fuel, while the required air to initiate fan rotation emanated from the tailcone-mounted auxiliary power unit. Powerplant parameters, displayed on the upper, center CRT, included engine pressure ratio (EPR), fan speed (N1), intermediate rotor speed (N2), high-pressure rotor speed (N3), and oil temperature, oil pressure, and oil quantity.

The flight plan and waypoints had already been loaded before initial pushback.

A gentle throttle advance, after clearance from ground control, preceded the twinjet's taxi, lateral movements made with the aid of the nosewheel steering tiller on the captain's left side and ground velocity indicated by the EADI.

Third for take off, the 216,000-pound 757-200, operating as Flight FI 614 and monitoring the tower on a frequency of 119.1, was instructed to follow the United 767-300 to Runway 13-Right, the green light taxiway centerline progressively consumed by the nose wheel as the aircraft moved toward the jewel light-glittering Twin Towers of the World Trade Center on the horizon.

Once centered on the runway, the aircraft was instructed, "Icelandair 614, cleared for take off, Runway 13-Right. Caution wake turbulence from United 767 heavy." Initiating spool-up of its two 40,100 thrust-pound Rolls Royce turbofans, it restrained its forward movement with the aid of its toe brakes, before depressing its thrust switch and unleashing itself into a lengthy, engine life preservation roll at reduced throttle settings and attaining initial control by means of its nose wheel until the rudder became effective at about 50 knots. The green engine pressure ratio, exhaust gas temperature, fuel flow, N1, N2, and N3 indications, pinnacling on the CRT display, affirmed air- and fuel-generating thrust.

Ground speed calls commenced at 80 knots, the aircraft accelerating through its V1 velocity of 162. Horizontal stabilizer-leveraged into an eight-degree, nose wheel-disengaging rotation, the 757 divorced itself from the concrete by means of its now lift-generating wings, retracting its tricycle undercarriage and engaging its vertical pitch mode as it climbed through 200 feet at a 175-knot, 15-degree attitude.
The exhaust gas temperature and fan speeds respectively registered 157 and 917.

Pursuing its standard instrument departure (SID), the aircraft aileron-nodded into a left bank over the Belt Parkway into dusk, surmounting the gold, green, orange, and white light splotch, like iridescent paint poured atop a black canvas, of Queens, contacting New York Departure on 126.8.

Climbing through 500 feet, it engaged its autopilot in order to control lateral navigation and rate of ascent, retracting its double-slotted trailing edge flaps from the five-degree position.

Ascending though 3,400 feet, it was instructed to pursue a 060-degree heading and to climb and maintain 11,000 feet. Crossing Long Island on a diagonal track, it assumed a 6,000 foot-per-minute climb at a 220-knot airspeed, the cockpit becoming increasingly encased in slipstream. The climb checklist was completed.
Further instructed to climb and maintain 17,000 feet, Flight 614 plunged through a smoky cloud deck toward Connecticut, surmounting its misty top at 24,000 feet where the last remnant of the icy blue sky had been temporarily floodlit by lightning flashes.

Seemingly caught in a black, vaporous, turbulence-incubating void, the slender, narrow body fuselage, propelled by its wide diameter, life-providing engines, settled into its assigned plateau at flight level 350, bordered off its port wing by a line of arctic blue over Portland, Maine. The VNAV was engaged.

Dinner, detailed by the "Saga Business Class Menu" and preceded by a selection of aperitifs and spirits, included "pate diplomat" and jumbo shrimp on a bed of lettuce with fresh lemon and cocktail sauce; seafood in Pernod saffron sauce au gratin or filet of veal in mushroom cream sauce served with tortellini, green beans, and carrots; a selection of red and white vintage wines; a bread basket with Icelandic butter; Bel Paese soft Italian cheese, slices of gouda, crackers, red grapes, and walnuts; cheese cake in raspberry sauce; coffee; and French hazelnut-filled bonbons.

Caught in the black, referenceless void as it pursued its northeasterly, transatlantic track, the intercontinental Boeing 757 had traced its invisible path over St. John, New Brunswick; the Gulf of St. Lawrence; and Goose Bay, Labrador, before departing the North American continent over the foreboding ocean, the only light now visible outside the cabin the reflection of the flashing, under-fuselage beacon on the port engine cowling.

Because of the sun's northern hemisphere location, however, day appeared quickly, at 0340 Iceland time, or 2340 New York time, in the form of a thin, barely perceptible line of cold, dull blue which separated the night sky above from the black, indistinguishable ocean surface and the smoky, slab-like layers of cloud below. That line represented the horizon. Somewhere, beyond the left wing, lay the tip of Greenland. The blue line intensified.

Dawn's subsequent chartreuse glow, piercing the cloud layers with fiery intensity, transformed the sky into a series of dull red and copper streaks, floodlighting the arctic snow-resembling cumulostratus cloud deck which now became visible beneath the engine pylon-supporting wings.

Initiating its automatic landing, aircraft TI-FIH settled into a power-reduced, 3,500-foot-per-minute descent, transitioning through 32,000 feet as its airspeed indicator inched beyond the 300-knot mark. Engine parameters, varying according to powerplant, included an engine pressure ratio of 096, a fan speed of 390, and an exhaust gas temperature of 307. Landing weight, after enroute fuel burn, had been calculated as 180,000 pounds, or well below its maximum.

Bowing toward and penetrating the white and gray, turbulence-producing cloud tendrils at 16,000 feet, the twinjet bored through the obscurity with its bullet nose, now assuming a 1,800 foot-per-minute descent rate. In order to adhere to the 10,000-foot speed restriction, the airspeed was set for 250 knots and the altimeter for 2,000 feet.

Descending through 9,000 feet at a shallow, 500 foot-per-minute rate, the captain clipped the ILS Approach Chart to Keflavik International Airport's Runway 20 to his control yoke, tuning into the automatic terminal information service (ATIS) and noting cloud cover, rain, and a temperature of plus nine degrees Celsius for our arrival.

Penetrating gray density on a 089-degree heading, the aircraft descended through 2,900 feet, at which point the altitude alert light illuminated, indicating imminent approach of the previously-set 2,000-foot limitation. Indicated air speed (IAS) was now dialed to the "215"-knot mark.

Maximum trailing edge flap extension speeds, according to the cockpit placard, indicated 240 knots for one degree, 220 for five degrees, 210 for 15, 195 for 20, 190 for 25, and 162 for 30.

The EHSI display, changed to the expanded ILS mode, yielded weather and traffic data, and the localizer captive mode button was activated.

Shedding the obscurity at 2,000 feet, the 757 emerged over the navy-gray, silver-capped Atlantic, briefly arresting its descent and leveraging into a right bank toward a 141-degree heading and the tip of Iceland. The indicated air speed was dialed to the 180-knot setting.

Extending its double-slotted flaps to the five-degree position as airspeed bled off to the 200-knot mark, Flight 614 maintained a 201-degree final approach heading.

The undercarriage lever, lowered at 180 knots during review of the Final Approach Checklist, had been followed by incremental flap extensions, to the 20- and finally 30-degree positions, the latter, coincident with a noted, nose-down trim, at a 158-knot airspeed. Needled by rain, the aircraft approached the red and white, runway-threshold lights, beyond which the white touchdown lines could be seen through the low-lying cloud sheaths.

Passing over the green, brown, and gold moss-carpeted lava fields and the multi-colored roofs of Keflavik, the 757-200 descended through the 1,000-foot level at a 500 foot-per-minute rate, its VREF speed pegged at 143 knots, and closed the gap to Runway 20 amid a progressive flare and automatic altitude calls: "100...50...40...30...20...10."

Thudding on to the concrete with its quad-wheeled, outstretched main undercarriage units, the twinjet rebowed earthward until its nose wheel had made equal contact with the white light-centered strip, its thrust reverser and speedbrake handles already armed.

Ground speed calls, mimicking those transmitted during the flare, ensued: "80...70...60...50," at which point the reverse thrust mode was deactivated and the concrete barely moved beneath the cockpit windows.

Turning off the active runway, now with the aid of the nose wheel steering tiller, the long, narrow body twin, somehow having assumed the mistaken identity of an intercontinental jetliner, taxied to Gate One next to an Icelandair 737-400 registered TI-FIB as the wand-instructing marshaller grew in size until he stood only inches from the nose, where the parking brake was engaged and the accordion-like jetbridge was extended to the second, port door.

IV

Increased demand on maturing 757 routes, coupled with the design's inherent stretchability, resulted in the type's first, and only, dimensionally divergent version, which offered ten-percent lower seat-mile costs and increased its passenger capacity and underfloor cargo volumes by, respectively, 20 and 50 percent.

First announced on September 2, 1996, after German charter carrier Condor Flugdienst had placed an order for 12 firm and 12 optioned aircraft, the type, designated "757-300," featured a 23.4-foot fuselage stretch, comprised of a 13.4-foot plug ahead of the wing and a ten-foot plug behind it, producing a new, 178.7-foot overall length. The world's largest, single-aisle twinjet, eclipsed only in length by the quad-engined DC-8 Super 60 series, it could accommodate 289 single-class, six-abreast passengers at a 29-inch pitch, although a typical mixed-class arrangement more standardly entailed 12 first class, four-abreast seats at a 36-inch pitch and 231 economy class, six-abreast seats at a 32-inch pitch, all in the elongated, 141.9-foot-long, wide-look cabin modeled after that of the Next Generation 737. Lower-deck volume equally increased-to 1,071 cubic feet in the forward hold and 1,299 cubic feet in the aft hold.

In order to cater to the increased stresses created by the longer fuselage, strengthening occurred on the wings, high-lift device, engine pylons, and undercarriage, and a tailskid ensured protection during excessive rotation angles.

Still powered by two Rolls Royce RB.211-535E4 turbofans, the aircraft had a 240,000-pound maximum take off weight and a 2,055 nautical mile range with 243 passengers.

The 757-300 prototype, NU701 and the 804th aircraft built, was first rolled out in Renton, Washington, on May 19, 1998, and took to the skies for the first time three months later, on August 2, completing a successful, 2.5-hour flight in which it attained a maximum, 250-knot indicated air speed and 16,000-foot altitude. Employed in the initial airworthiness and basic controllability realm of the flight test program, it explored flutter, stalls, stability, and control, and demonstrated the need for vortex generator installation on the leading edge of the outboard flap to improve stall characteristics.

Two other airframes, NU721 and NU722, permitted completion of the program after 356 flights collectively totaling 912 hours, and led to FAA certification, for 180-minute ETOPS sorties, on January 27, 1999, concluding the shortest, design-to-production cycle of any previous Boeing derivative, which had spanned 27 months.

Condor inaugurated the type into revenue service two months later, on March 19.

Improvements to existing 757-200s and -300s were attained with the Aviation Partners Boeing Blended Winglet Retrofit Program. Winglets, featuring large radii and smooth chord variations in transition sections, avoid drag-producing vortex concentrations and provide optimum aerodynamic loading, resulting in smaller wing tip vortices than either straight wing or even conventional winglet systems with angular transitions produce.

The retrofit, which carried a system weight of 1,320 pounds, entailed outer skin and rib replacement, in-tank stringer reinforcement, lower cover fastener replacement, leading edge flap vortex generator additions, and new external position and anti-collision light installation.

The system, increasing wingspan from a former 124.10 to a current 134.9 feet, yielded numerous economic and performance benefits, including an average annual, per-aircraft fuel savings of some 300,000 US gallons.

The first eight-foot, two-inch winglet-equipped 757, a -200 series aircraft belonging to Continental Airlines, first flew on March 9, 2005 from Everett, Washington, and today the program qualifies as a resounding success.

V

On October 18, 2004, the 1,050th-and last-Boeing 757, an original-length -200 series, rolled out of the final assembly plant in Renton and was delivered to Shanghai Airlines of China the following year.

The aircraft, having been designed as a larger-capacity, twin-engined, advanced counterpart to the 727, and as a smaller-capacity, narrow body complement to the simultaneously-developed 767, for one-stop transcontinental routes, uniquely filled two markets and hence created one of its own, ultimately morphing into both higher-capacity and longer-range intercontinental variants. Of the 1,049 aircraft delivered, 913 had been 757-200s, 80 had been 757-200PFs, one had been a 757-200M, and 55 had been 757-300s.

The victim of the recession and the post-9/11 reduction in air travel, the type was mostly usurped by Boeing's own Next Generation 737 and the Airbus A-321, whose smaller passenger capacities more closely matched changing route demands. Although the present 787-8 may provide limited replacement capability on high-capacity 757 sectors, no direct, advanced design counterpart is currently envisioned, with high-end versions of Boeing's own eventual 737 replacement likely to qualify as its successor. Nevertheless, the type represented the pinnacle of single-aisle, twin-engined airliner development, whose payload and range parameters far exceeded those traditionally associated with such a configuration.

Recognizing Noise Reduction for Air Conditioner


Air conditioner sometimes can become extremely noisy devices, and the noise can distract the people in the house or in neighboring apartment that can disturb their sleep or their workday. Actually, there are several ways that you can apply to block this noisy sound which can work for all of the air conditioners models. Just check out the following information to recognize several ways of noise reduction for air conditioner.

The first thing that you can do is to use sound blanket frame. This sound blanket frame is ideal for reducing the outdoor air conditioner which is always running and also generating large amount of noise constantly. By simply building wooden or metal frame around the device and attach the outdoor blankets to the frame, you can get the best way for reducing noise. This sound blanket frame can effectively stop most of the sounds that come from your outdoor AC unit. You should keep in mind that this unit needs a little bit of ventilation so that the frame must be built about 18 to 24 inches larger than the unit in a way to allow the air flow but not allow the noise to escape.

For the second thing, window air conditioning unit can be noisy if it is not secured properly in the window. One of the best ways for solving this problem is to put down the board below the unit and then attach the unit firmly to it by using the brackets so that there will be nothing on the window unit itself that can rattle or vibrate. If it cannot fix the problem, you can try to put a barrier around your window unit along with the blanket or the sound blanket. This can reduce the noise effectively from spreading to other rooms of the house or apartment.

Another great option for reducing the noise for your outdoor air conditioning unit is to easily build the wall around the unit which reflects any sound that comes from them. You need to build the wall out of wood in order to make the sound to be partly absorbed and also partly sent away from your apartment, home, or business. You have to build the wall for at least a foot higher the actual air conditioning unit itself. Thus, the sound will not easily escape.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

The Importance Of Regular Commercial Air Conditioning Maintenance


Heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems are an essential part of any industrial, commercial or retail space. Commercial systems often use components and custom installations that fit the needs of a particular building. One of the most important parts of keeping these systems running is regular maintenance from professionals who have experience providing commercial air conditioning service. There are several clear reasons why this type of service is needed at least once every year.

Energy Efficiency

Commercial air conditioning systems are designed to work for long periods of time every day of the year. They are durable and resilient. Despite the commercial quality of the system, however, many problems such as vibrations, unexpected debris in the intake and power surges can still damage the equipment. This causes small inefficiencies that multiply into increased energy consumption over the course of a single season or year. Regular maintenance will ensure that the air conditioning system is working efficiently at all times.

Dirt And Debris

Commercial spaces are regularly home to more individuals than private spaces like a home. The constant opening of doors and foot traffic causes a large amount of dust and debris to fly into the air. The filter in the system will remove a significant percentage of this debris. Unfortunately, they do not remove everything. They can also become clogged forcing dust into the system and across the components. This forms a layer of dirt that will insulate key wires and parts causing the air conditioner to malfunction over time. Some buildings could even develop problems with harmful mold or low air quality because of the buildup of contaminants. A commercial air conditioning service will be able to clean the entire system increasing air quality and extending the life of the parts.

Customer And Employee Satisfaction

Spaces that use commercial air conditioners are home to customers and employees. The temperature in any room or building rises quickly when occupied by many people. Retail storefronts need good air conditioning in order to keep customers happy and shopping. Offices or other spaces require air conditioning to keep employees productive. Regular maintenance from a professional repair service will ensure that the system does not breakdown or work so inefficiently that the area becomes uncomfortable. This is very important since many systems are working for more than half the day counteracting the heat generated by human bodies and essential equipment.

Avoid Future Repairs

Commercial air conditioning service is essential because it helps to prevent costly future repairs. Emergencies could occur at any time because of an unforeseen event. An air conditioner that is in poor condition could become damaged beyond repair. Similarly, problems that are easily repaired during a normal inspection could grow into dangerous and irreparable issues if left unaddressed. Problems with compressors, evaporator coils and fans might even expand outside of the system and could cause severe damage to the surrounding room or building. The cost of replacing an entire commercial air conditioning system is far more than the cost of maintaining a maintenance contract with trained professionals.