That’s why I stick to service. I don’t miss construction.
I don't mind new construction sometimes. It's nice working on a jobsite with other people and music going and shit. I live in a small town so it's mostly the same tradespeople you see so you're all kind of buddies. The pajeets were from the city. Working in people's houses can be stressful sometimes and you have to deal directly with the customers and people are fucked and some people are just fucking nuts. Personally, my favourite installs are single head minisplits 12,000k btu or smaller so the pipes are 3/8" and 1/4" in a house where nobody's home and it's just a straight shot from the head to the outdoor unit with maybe the electrical thrown in so you can make a full day out of it.
We do installs and service at the place I work. Installs are nice when you finish and the customers are stoked on their new equipment. They can also be huge nightmares. Service can be disheartening. It feels super good when you can fix the problem. But telling the customers they're going to need expensive parts or the regular fuckups from the distributors that lead to more visits and bullshit. Then there's the actual troubleshooting shit. Especially with the fucking digital stuff or anything to do with in floor heating.
We had this customer, we installed his HRV, his general contractor was fairly shady and did the in floor heating himself. He cheaped out and instead of getting a boiler or even an air-water heat pump, he used an electric hot water tank with a buffer tank. It was a $3 million dollar house. It's a big house with two floors. It has like 7 or 8 zones or something like that. The whole fucking thing is just a mess. It's disgusting what that dude did to them. He used janky Chinese pumps instead of grundfoss ones, janky Chinese zone valves, weird red pex piping that wasn't rehau or ipex or any name brand piping that had actually deformed from the heat.
The system basically didn't work at all. The house was basically just constantly cold. So, we got asked to come in and try and fix it. The dude had basically spent all his money, they'd gotten it from an accident settlement, and couldn't afford to replace the equipment or the work it would take to fix it properly, so we had to try and make what he had work. The first thing we found was that three of the pumps had burned out within less than a year, one of them had been shorting out, the electrical terminals and the wiring was black inside of it, it could have burned the fucking house down. Two of the janky Chinese zone valves were dead.
We ended up replacing all of those and then we needed to bleed the system because we figured out there were bad air locks everywhere. He didn't do his manifolds or any of that shit properly so bleeding it wasn't easy. It was like 2 or 3 weeks of stopping there every other day or so and bleeding the pipes and checking every zone to see if it was getting hot and every time it would and still every time we would go back and there'd be more air. Throughout those weeks of bleeding the lines we pretty much determined he fucked up the piping in the floors too. A few of the zones are way too big, the runs are too long and the spacing is fucked. The way he put everything together in the mechanical room was fucked too. Well, it was more like a tiny closet than a mechanical room. By the end, we did the best we could. It was heating up some of the house well other parts not so much. But the whole thing's basically still fucked and needs to be completely redone and even then, still won't work as well as it should because the piping in the floor is fucked too.