A/C Blues

May. 14th, 2011 11:20 am
kybearfuzz: (Bitter Bitchie)
[personal profile] kybearfuzz
Before the rant, big happy birthday wishes to [livejournal.com profile] book_of_daniel! Enjoy your 29th again! :)

So after having trouble with the leaking A/C unit the other night, I called for a guy to come in and check out the unit. He was referred to me by a coworker who says he did good work for her.

Well, he just left. Here's the possibilities with my 33 year old A/C unit.

  • Replace the evaporator coil for $800.
  • Get a whole new unit for $4,700.

With the age of my current system, the $800 patch job will likely only be a temporary fix if something new breaks. The new unit will cost a hell of a lot more, but comes with a 10-year warranty and will cut my electric bill down. And I likely will have to get a new unit if the old system breaks some other way.

So I'm strongly leaning toward the new system. While I'm not terribly happy, this isn't going to crush me. I save quite a bit. My sibs all drive expensive vehicles and buy unneeded things for their kids, I try to be practical. The reason I put money in my savings is so when these sorts of crushing costs hit, I'm not devastated. Wow... I'm boring.

When did I get so old?

Date: 2011-05-14 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] furrbear.livejournal.com
From the land of where AC isn't an option, $4700 isn't too bad. There will be a good deal of work required in the furnace also to replace the AC evaporator coil.

Check around with different companies. There are usually rebates from the electric utilities, especially when replacing an old unit with a new more efficient one. The AC company can also give you leads on any applicable state and local tax credits for the replacement.

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