Las Vegas Review-Journal

For AC workers

From criminals to reptiles, Vegas technician­s have seen it all

- By Katelyn Newberg Las Vegas Review-journal

Wtemperatu­re rise in the Las Vegas Valley, tourists sweat, ice cream oozes, outdoor workers sweat — and air conditione­rs break.

Owners and managers of air conditioni­ng companies agree summer, when machines are overworkin­g to keep the desert heat at bay, is the busiest time of the year. With all of the emergency calls and routine breakdowns of air conditione­rs, Southern Nevada companies have collected some unusual stories.

Residents can be desperate to get their houses cool when air conditione­rs break down, said Brad Dworkin, the owner of A-tech Air Conditioni­ng and Heating.

“There was one where they wanted (the air conditione­r) worked on immediatel­y, but they didn’t have enough money,” Dworkin said. “They wanted to know if they could pay me in what they had— but the rest in apricots.”

Another complained of the heat turning furniture into cooking appliances.

“Can you please come out immediatel­y,” Dworkin recalled the customer saying. “You can fry an egg on my kitchen table.”

He suggests that if your air conditione­r does start malfunctio­ning, turn it off immediatel­y.

“People try to get what they can out of it. They’re actually doing more damage that way,” Dworkin said.

“If you’re forcing it to (run), other

DOG DAYS

components can fail in the process of trying to get it to work.”

Missing pieces

Angel Martinez, a service manager with Hawthorne Plumbing, Heating and Cooling, said his technician­s occasional­ly go to repair an air conditioni­ng unit and find nothing inside.

“The inside components are copper, and you find that people steal them,” Martinez said. “We went to some people’s houses where the condensers were gone completely.”

Once all of the parts inside an air conditione­r are stolen, the entire unit has to be replaced. Even units in hard-to-reach places aren’t safe, Martinez said.

“Somehow they got on the roof and were able to steal all the parts,” referring to an incident with a rooftop unit.

Besides being wary of thieves, Martinez said people should deal with air conditione­r problems when they arise in the fall or spring, to avoid total breakdowns during brutal weather.

“You did try to warn them prior,” he said.

Protesting pets

Ashley Moore, office manager for The Cooling Company, said an air conditione­r’s biggest enemy can be the angry family dog during the summer.

Moore said dogs left outside are At that point, the technician had to go up in the attic. As soon as the customer told him the python could be up in the attic, the technician called in and said, ‘I’m out.’ known to relieve themselves on units or chew on wires.

“They are protesting,” she said. “They need to get back inside, where the AC is working.”

In these instances, the animals have to take the blame instead of record-high temperatur­es.

“It’s a little frustratin­g, because it didn’t even stop working because it’s hot outside. It stopped working because my dog is upset,” Moore said.

She said The Cooling Company will fix problems regardless of what — or who — caused them.

“It’s a company that will have your back, whether your dog eats your air conditioni­ng or not,” she said.

Lions, tigers and snakes

A technician from Goettl Air Conditioni­ng Las Vegas learned that, when a house gets too hot, snakes will search for the coolest areas.

But one worker wasn’t happy when the missing snake was a 12-foot python,

said Ken Goodrich, the owner of the company.

“At that point, the technician had to go up in the attic,” Goodrich said. “As soon as the customer told him the python could be up in the attic, the technician called in and said,

‘I’m out.’ ”

Goodrich went through his list of employees until he found one who had experience with snakes. It turns out the python was hiding under the homeowner’s couch.

“Just as the guy wraps up, (the snake) kind of pokes his head out and looked at him,” Goodrich said.

He said other technician­s were pursued by animals, with an aggressive dog chasing a technician up a tree. Another encounter included lions, tigers and panthers owned by magicians Siegfried and Roy.

“These animals would stalk you like prey,” Goodrich said, describing how technician­s would walk along a second-floor balcony over the animals to work on the air conditioni­ng. “They would get low on their bellies and kind of walk along with you.”

Technician­s were assured the animals couldn’t jump high enough to reach them. One worker quit after going there the first time, Goodrich said.

“He had broken English,” Goodrich said. “He said ‘I go to Siegfried and Roy and I piece of chicken.’ He felt like he was going to be dinner.”

Contact Katelyn Newberg at knewberg@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0240. Follow @k_newberg on Twitter.

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