Said a pet was okay

When my roommate said that they wanted to get a pet, I was ecstatic about the idea.

I am an critter person and I don’t recognize right when I don’t have pets in my life. I was happy to get a furry buddy in the beach house and like spending time together with a new pooch. Unfortunately, I didn’t suppose about how little our heating, cooling, and air quality control plan would desire a pet adding problems to its weekly operations. Turns out, critter hair puts a lot of extra strain on a heating and cooling device. When you’re consistently circulating air through the entire apartment with a centralized indoor air handling device, you manage to circulate a lot of hair through the air vents and air ducts. Unfortunately, it doesn’t stop there. The hair can not only clog up your ventilation passageways, but it can entirely labor its way into your actual heating and cooling units if you aren’t careful. The air filter, itself, can become so plugged up that it turns into a fire hazard. The whole thing is a losing venture, unless you’re ready to install specialized hair-catching air vents and air filters throughout the central heating, cooling, and air quality control system, personally, I wasn’t ready for this giant move. But the HVAC plan wasn’t capable of contending with the length and volume of critter hair that was quickly floating in the air. One full HVAC plan breakdown later, every one of us decided that every one of us couldn’t have a pet and a central HVAC. The air quality control plan had to go.

new hvac