Seattle AC, Heating and Appliance Services

 

If your appliances, air conditioning or heating systems need immediate professional repair help we are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. We provide same day service in the entire Seattle and surrounding areas. We repair all models and brands of appliances, heating and air conditioning systems. Our service call is always free with the repair and there is no extra charge for nights, weekends and holidays. Our technicians are professionally trained to give you 100 % satisfaction guarantee service. In order to make sure that you pay the lowest possible price for your appliance repairs, air conditioning or heating system we have low-price guarantee policy protection.

Please note that all purchased appliance parts are shipped directly to you.

Seattle Appliance, Air conditioning and Heating repair is specialized on:
Refrigerator repairs
Oven
 repairs
Stoves repairs
Dishwashers

Air conditions repairs
Heating / Furnaces repairs
Dryers repairs
Washers repairs
Microwaves repairs
Disposals repairs
Water heaters repairs
Trash compactors repairs

We service and repair all appliances, heating and air conditioning brands:

Whirlpool
Maytag
Jenn Air
Hotpoint
GE 
Frigidaire
Magic Chef
Brown
Caloric
Amana
American Standard
Aprilaire
York
Kitchen Aid
Heil
Janitrol
Trane
LG
Bryant
Carrier 
Carrier 
Admiral
Sears
White Westinghouse
Tappan 
Speed Queen
Roper 
Sub Zero
Lennox
Ruud
Tempstar 
Thermador
and more view the rest

You can set up your same day Seattle appliance, air conditioning or heating repair appointment.

 Please include your name, contact information and brief explanation of the problem that you are having with your appliance. As soon as we receive the email we will contact you in order to schedule your appointment for Seattle appliance repair.

Our Appliance, Air Conditioning and Heating repair areas include all of Seattle and the surrounding cities:

Adelaide
Alderwood Manor
Ames Lake
Avondale
Ballard Beacon Hill
Beaux Arts
Beaux Arts Village
Bellevue
Cascade
Clearview
Clyde Hill
Coal Creek
Columbia
Cottage Lake
Crown Hill
Earlmount
Earlmount
East Union
Eastgate
Eastmont
Edmonds
Everett
Fairwood
view the rest service areas

The information below is designed to provide how to increase the life of your appliances and use them in the most efficient way, so that will save you money. It is posted with the understanding that we are not offering advice that you do it yourself. If expert assistance is required, the services of competent professionals are available 24/7 at our toll free phone number.

800 465 0697

Detecting appliance breakdown 

Dealing with a appliance failure involves practical considerations: knowing what each important part of the appliance looks like, how it functions, where it is located, and how the parts are mechanically or electrically linked together. But failures are generally detected in a quite down-to-earth way, through the evidence of the senses by smelling a appliance motor burnout, for example, or by hearing a funny sound (an abnormal sound, really). You become attuned to the characteristic noises of large household appliances; the first indication of trouble is often an unfamiliar sound, such as the clanking of a loose object in the innards of a dishwasher, or the absence of a familiar sound, such as the rhythmic whumping of a dishwasher’s spray.

Noises and smells may point to the trouble. But the systematic analysis used by engineers can help to isolate the appliance problem faster. Any large appliance can be dissected into two interrelated sets of subsystems that are partly mechanical, partly electrical. 

In the first set, the subsystems consist of appliance components such as appliance motors, appliance pumps, appliance compressors, appliance valves and appliance heaters, all of which provide movement and mechanical energy and, in some, control the supply of fuel as the appliance runs through its cycle of operations. The subsystems of the second set include appliance devices such as timers, water-level switches, door interlocks and thermostats, that control the components of the first set; as the machine progresses through its cycle, these devices automatically start and stop the motors, pumps and heaters in accordance with a predetermined sequence that is fed into the appliance through push buttons, knobs and dials.
If one of the power subsystems fails, the machine does not do all its jobs. Breakdown of one of the appliance control subsystems can also stop an operation (or make it occur at the wrong time in the operating cycle), but this kind of failure is generally distinctive.

Soon after you start a clothes washer, for example, you expect to hear water splashing into the tub. If you do not, you know that something is wrong. But where do you look for the cause of failure? The best way is to start going through the power and control subsystems in a logical way, step by step, until you find one that does not work (or work at the proper time). In a clothes washer, the power subsystem is made up of the household water supply lines, the faucets, the hoses, the inlet valves and screens; and the motor, gears and belts. Always start at the beginning, for simple things are most often troublemakers. Is there pressure in the water pipe? Are the faucets turned on? Is there a kink in a hose? Are the inlet valves working? Are the inlet screens clogged?

The second, or controlling, appliance subsystem consists of the timer, which signals magnetic devices to start and stop the operations, the water-level switch, which shuts off water and safety switches. Is the timer failing to send an “open” signal to the inlet valves? Is the fill switch sending a “close” signal, even though the water level is down to zero?

Because you do not have appliance sophisticated test equipment, you cannot hope to isolate the defective part in every situation. But understanding how an appliance works is a powerful tool.

If expert assistance is required, the services of competent professionals like South West Plumbing in Seattle are available 24/7