Tuesday, December 30, 2014


It’s really remarkable how rugged a Trane Air Conditioner is.  It’s hard to stop a TRANE.


It’s Hard to Stop a Trane – Survival Series

An intoxicated driver in a large SUV hit the gas instead of the brake when attempting to pull out of his parking spot, completely crushing this heat pump, or so it seemed. Unbelievably, when the local fire department arrived at the scene, they found the unit’s ClimaTuff compressor still running strong!
It’s hard to stop a Trane – Trane air conditioner that is.  That’s why Berkun Air has been one of the top Trane resellers / installers and has been an elite status member as a Trane True Comfort Specialist.
Source:  Trane Facebook page, Hall of Fame entry.Berkun Air Conditioning of West Palm Beach, Florida

Friday, December 12, 2014

Berkun Quoted in Palm Beach Post on FPL Reducing Energy Rebates

Berkun Air is quoted in today’s Palm Beach Post pertaining to the significant cuts in FPLs energy efficiency rebates.  

If you know anyone remotely looking to get a new A/C unit, they need to act in the next few weeks.  Effective Jan 1, 2015, FPL energy rates are being scaled back by as much as 66% and SEER 14 units are being eliminated completely from the program.  Some rebates that were as high as $1,930 for a 5T air conditioner will   because the rebates are being slashed from as high as $1,930 and cut back to $660, a cut of $1,270.  !!  

If you have any questions what so ever, please call me at (561) 842-4362.  The return of investment from reduced electric consumption on higher efficiency units is incredible.

    

Monday, December 8, 2014

Florida Energy Credits Being Slashed Beginning January 1, 2015

Effective January 1, 2015, energy credits being offered through Florida Power & Light’s (FPL) Energy Rebate program will be slashed considerably compared programs that have been in place for years.

Replacement A/C System Must Be Installed by December 31, 2014 To Maximize Energy Credits

If you are thinking about updating an existing air conditioning system and want to maximize the energy credit you get from FPL, you need to act immediately and have the new system installed by December 31, 2014.  Additional changes to the program include no energy rebates for systems rated at 13 to 14 SEER rated systems after that date.

The two tables shown below show the credits for various SEER Efficiency Ratings before and after Jan 1, 2015.  As you can see, the amount of credits for various sized air conditioners has been slashed considerable.


If you are thinking about replacing your air conditioner, and want to maximize your return, you only have weeks to act.  If you have any questions about FPL Energy Rebates, my only recommendation is to act quickly for the best rebate credits are gone for good.
Call Berkun Air in West Palm Beach, FL at (561) 842-4362.






Thursday, December 4, 2014

What You Can Do When Your A/C is Making Strange Noises

When you visit the doctor’s office, the first thing the doctor does after listening to your body. It’s telling you things about what might be wrong.  Your air condition talks to you when things are beginning to break, and we’ll try to help you understand what is going wrong, and what you can do.
Normal Sounds Made By My Air Conditioner
All air conditioners make various types of noises – and at various sound levels.  It’s important to familiarize yourself with those normal sounds.  When the air conditioner turns on, you’ll generally hear the blower fan within the air handler (located in a closet, attic or garage) and the outdoor compressor unit.  The compressor unit consists of a large fan, which circulates air over the coils to remove heat, the compressor unit and its heavy duty motor, and a variety of electrical components.
When cold air is called for, the blower fan will turn on, as well as the exterior fan and compressor unit.  Often, the compressor motor will sound a bit louder on startup, and then mellow out in tone.  More modern units may even cut the compressor unit speed to half speed, which will make it quieter.

Troubling Sounds Your Air Conditioner May Make:

Your A/C Makes Clanking, Rattling, or other “Metallic” Sounds
Fixing a clanking, rattling, or metallic sound could be as easy as tightening several screws or bolts, or replacing a piece of hardware.  Excessive vibration may be caused from a fan blade that has been damaged and out of balance, or a bearing that is wearing out.  Generally, metallic sounds are the cheapest and easiest problems to solve – however, it can result in more serious problems in the future if gone unchecked.
The A/C is Making a Buzzing Sound
Buzzing sounds generally indicate that there is a problem with an electrical component on your air conditioning unit.  Electrical shorts in the compressor can create a buzzing or popping, which, if left unattended, can be a serious fire danger.
Another common buzzing problem is found in the outside A/C compressor unit’s “Electrical Relay”, sometimes referred to as the “Contactor Relay”.  Over time, the contact points can become burned, causing a poor electrical connection which causes the unit to vibrate at high speed, and thus the buzzing sound.  Over time, the relay will fail, and cause the unit not to get the power it needs, as shown in the video below.
The Copper Tubing Makes Bubbling, Gurgling, or Hissing Sounds
More often than not, bubbling, gurgling, or hissing sounds are caused by a refrigerant leak somewhere in the compressor. A leaking compressor means your air conditioning isn’t getting as cold as it should, and less refrigerant not only makes you overwork the unit to cool a room (which leads to a higher energy bill), but also is toxic to the environment. If you hear any of these noises, call an A/C repairman to take a look immediately.
Home Air Condtioner Compressor Fail. It's probably has not.
The Exterior Air Conditioning Unit is Making a Clicking Sound
If your A/C unit is not functioning properly, and you hear a rapid and repeating clicking sound, then you may have a faulty relay or control unit in the compressor. Your system will not work correctly until it is fixed.
The Air Handler in the Closet or Garage is Making a Loud Screeching Noise
While more common in older air conditioning systems, particularly in the air handler, a loud screeching sound is often associated with a loose and slipping fan belt.  This is easily corrected by either tightening up the fan belt, or replacing the fan belt completely.  Newer systems have done away with fan belt drives completely as newer fan units are connected directly to the fan itself.
If your air conditioner is making one of these sounds, we urge you to contact an authorized  Palm Beach County Air Conditioning Repairman.  It may be a cheap and simple fix, but if left undiagnosed, there can be more costly repairs down the road.
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Jeff Berkun - Owner of Berkun Air, West Palm Beach
Jeff Berkun - Owner, Berkun Air
Founded in 1992, Jeff Berkun has run his  business based on providing customers with outstanding service and expert advise.  Berkun Air of West Palm Beach, FL is one of the few air conditioning companies to be awarded an A+ Rating from the Palm Beach County Consumer Affairs Division.  Check us on Angie’s List.  We’re rated very highly. 

Energy Credits to be slashed in Florida.

Florida - the Sunshine State, is about to see incentives for energy efficiency evaporate.  Sadly, Florida is more interested in public utilities making more power plants than  harnessing the sun and using energy efficient appliances to reduce overall power consumption.

Air Conditioning Products by Berkun Air of West Palm BeachToday, Florida regulators approved proposals to gut Florida’s energy-efficienecy goals by more than 90 percent and to terminate solar rebate programs by the end of 2015, and thus giving investor-owned utilities everything they wanted.

If you are looking for energy credits for a high efficiency air conditioning system or solar rebates, now might be a good time to act considering they are about to be slashed.

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TALLAHASSEE — State regulators on Tuesday approved proposals to gut Florida's energy-efficiency goals by more than 90 percent and to terminate solar rebate programs by the end of 2015, giving the investor-owned utilities virtually everything they wanted.

After almost two hours of debate, members of the state Public Service Commission voted 3-2 in support of staff recommendations that backed the proposals of Duke Energy Florida, Tampa Electric and Florida Power & Light.

The two dissenters, Commissioners Lisa Edgar and Julie Brown, said they could not agree with a plan that so drastically altered state energy policy.

"It's not the direction I want to go in," Edgar said before the vote. "I am uncomfortable going to the reduced goals. It is a policy and it is a statement, as a state, of what our energy policies are.

Brown said although energy efficiency and solar programs have costs, the state needs to balance all its needs.

"We have inherent conflicts," Brown said. "We're supposed to encourage conservation but it must be cost-effective. I think we should be investing in all of it.

The commissioners did agree to hold workshops on ways to improve solar energy in the Sunshine State after deciding to end current rebate programs administered by the utilities.
But that won't be enough to stave off possible legal challenges to the decision.

Environmental groups question whether the PSC might have violated state law with a policy that leaves no energy-efficiency requirements for the utilities.

"It's completely inconsistent with what the other states are doing," said Stephen Smith, executive director of the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, which opposed the utility proposals during hearings this summer.

"We believe there may have been laws broken today by not setting goals," Smith said. "We as an organization are going to try to find every outlet possible to continue to fight.

Meanwhile, Florida's utilities will go into the holidays with their biggest wishes this year, including billions of dollars in new power plants that will come online in the next decade.
The PSC, for instance, approved Duke Energy for a $1.5 billion natural gas plant that the utility wanted to replace the shuttered Crystal River nuclear plant that broke during a botched upgrade and maintenance project as well as two coal units the company plans to retire.
What did consumers get this year?

The utilities will reduce rates come Jan. 1 by pennies a month for the average customers — 16 cents for Duke ratepayers; $1.14 for Tampa Electric; and $1.94 for FPL.
Most of the savings is the result of lower fuel prices that are out of the utilities' control. And the utilities do not profit from fuel costs.

The utilities pressed for the cuts to energy efficiency and the end of the solar rebate programs because they said neither is cost-effective. The utilities insist that it is now cheaper for them to produce a kilowatt of electricity than to save it.

Other states continue to find ways to save energy at less cost than generating it because they have policies aimed at doing just that.

Vermont, for instance, pays manufacturers to offer high-efficiency products at lower prices. A compact fluorescent light bulb that costs $1.25 in Florida costs 99 cents in Vermont. Policies like that, big and small, mean Vermont now meets 2.12 percent of its annual energy needs by saving electricity rather than producing it.

In Florida, the number is 0.25 percent — and now dropping.
The moves by Florida utilities come as the ground beneath them continues to shift, threatening their business model. Increasingly, they are in need of ways to thwart the growing impact of rooftop solar and battery storage technology that could give more consumers energy independence.

And the utilities know it all too well. What the rest of the world admiringly calls renewable energy and conservation, the utilities call "disruptive'' technologies.

"The financial risks created by disruptive challenges include declining utility revenues, increasing costs, and lower profitability, particularly over the long-term," according to a report written for the Edison Electric Institute, which represents all U.S. investor-owned utilities.
Environmental groups argue that the need for new power plants could be offset with energy efficiency at much lower costs to ratepayers. And stronger state support for solar programs would give consumers more choice and energy freedom.

But Tuesday, commissioners debated the potential impacts on ratepayers, including those most disadvantaged.

PSC chairman Art Graham said he has gotten an earful about the proposal to gut the energy-efficiency goals. But those concerns did not prevent him from siding with commission staff and the utilities to end the solar rebates and the energy-efficiency goals.

"My office has had many calls about this item," Graham said before the vote. "One of the things that is a concern to me is how some of the low-income people would participate.

Instead, the commissioners haggled over six options, including keeping the current goals in place. But they could not reach a unanimous decision and the majority back the utilities.

"It's a very sad day for the state of Florida," Smith said.

Contact Ivan Penn at ipenn@tampabay.com or (727) 892-2332. Follow @Consumers_Edge.



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Jeff Berkun - Owner of Berkun Air, West Palm Beach
Jeff Berkun - Owner, Berkun Air
Call Berkun Air of West Palm Beach for a second opinion at (561) 842-4362.

Founded in 1992, Jeff Berkun has run his business based on providing customers with outstanding service and expert advise. Berkun Air is one of the few air conditioning companies to be awarded an A+ Rating from the Palm Beach County Consumer Affairs Division.

Trane’s TruComfort Air Conditioning System Explained (Video)

The TruComfort A/C Series is the most advanced line of air conditioners that TRANE has ever offered.  It’s also the quietest and more comfortable on the market, keeping indoor air  temperatures within ½ of 1 degree.  By varying the speed of the unit, air temperatures are maintained.  Air flow within the home is more constant too, which helps to maintain humidity levels for unmatched indoor comfort.
Act now if you are interested because the energy credits are getting cut at the state level, so there is still time.



Berkun-Air-Conditioning-West-Palm-Beach-Truck
Berkun Air - West Palm Beach. A+ Rated by the Palm Beach County Consumer Affairs Division.=

Criminal Background Check Wanted by Angie’s List. Why?

Everyone knows about Angie’s List, the US-based subscription supported website containing reviews of local businesses.  A few months ago, Berkun Air was contacted by a representative of Angie’s List wanting us to advertise in their print edition of their magazine that specifically focuses on people who live in Palm Beach County.  The magazine, but the same name, is mailed out to roughly 42,000 paid subscribers in the county and provides useful articles on working with local businesses – plus some advertisements of those that qualify.
The representative told us that we had garnered enough customer supplied reviews of work we had conducted.  Luckily for us, Berkun Air of West Palm Beach earned STRAIGHT A’s across the board from each of its reviews.
With that good standing, we were allowed to be considered to advertise to their customer base.  This was far from most advertisers who will promote anyone with a buck !!  After reviewing all the information, we were then told that we would have to pass a criminal background test before we moved forward !!
It’s not often that people ask you to submit for a criminal background check, but after thinking about it for a second, I thought about how brilliant this was to differentiate yourself as a company, to actually want to provide a service for your subscribers.  Honestly, there are so many companies here in South Florida that have a shady track record.  This was truly a different approach..
The more I thought about this, the more I’m impressed.  I was more than willing to complete the form needed to move to the next step.
Yes, we submitted the data to run the criminal background test – with pride.
Next step, create an ad.