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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Short #63 - I've Been Doing This 30 Years

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 16 July 2019

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan breaks down the most common defense for bad practices: time in the industry. He also explains how to STOP USING IT as an excuse.

When technicians communicate with each other, especially online, they tend to justify their practices with the phrase, "I've been doing this 30 years!" What they don't realize is that their old training (and habits) don't reflect the current state of the industry and the current standards of best practices.

When technicians spend so many years in the field, they may justify bad practices by saying that they've always done a task a certain way. However, as practices evolve in the industry, time becomes less relevant as former practices fall out of favor. For example, beer-can cold is no longer an acceptable means of determining the suction line temperature.

While former practices may have helped technicians get an A/C unit to blow cold air, those practices hardly optimized performance. The goal of training nowadays is to teach technicians the best practices to optimize their customers' systems. IAQ and customer service are also much more important in our industry today.

The HVAC industry has also evolved a lot in terms of equipment, refrigerant, and oil. In the past, refrigeration systems didn't have to worry about oil conversions because we used different oils and refrigerants. Practices that we used 30 years ago are no longer applicable; technology has passed those practices by.

Nowadays, we would be best off if we paid attention to new training and best practices. We must admit what we don't know and be willing to learn more about the technology our industry relies on today. Listening to others is how we will improve, not stubbornly defending our bad practices by saying how long we've worked in the industry.

 

Learn more about Refrigeration Technologies HERE.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey this is the HVAC school podcast and this is a podcast that's designed to help you

0:07.8

remember some things you forgot along the way as well as some things you might have

0:10.8

forgotten to know in the first place and this is a short

0:13.2

episode and I'm Brian and I'm going to thank our sponsors real quick.

0:16.9

Some of you are like, why do you always talk sponsors at the beginning on the

0:19.3

podcast?

0:20.3

It's so boring.

0:21.3

Well hey, they're the ones who pay to keep the lights on around here.

0:24.2

For those of you who work for a living, this is part of my job. I do it at the goodest of my heart because

0:28.6

I want to, but also, hey, it really helps when people help pay the bills, and I only allow people to help pay the bills who I'm excited to talk about.

0:35.8

So there you have it. carrier and carrier.com, great sponsor, fieldpiece and fieldpiece.com,

0:41.0

they make the SM 380 manifold.

0:44.4

You want to take a look at that, the new SM 380

0:46.7

manifold, it has so many features and benefits that it's going to be hard

0:49.4

for me to mention them all here, but take a look at Field Piece.com,

0:52.3

also Navac and Navac Global

0:53.8

com refrigeration technologies at refriggedtech.com they make great stuff

0:57.9

including Nylog. Nylog is the stuff we put on pretty much all of our

1:02.1

threaded refrigerant

1:03.1

connectors just a little bit little dabble do you that's refrigeration

1:06.3

technologies refrigerate.com and then finally good way in good way

1:09.7

com good way is a great American company. They make excellent industrial

...

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