Powder Springs, GA AC, Heating and Appliance Repair
Service
If you have a problem with your appliane, air conditioning, furnace
or heating system and need an immediate assistance Powder Springs, GA Appliance,
Air Conditioning and Heating Repair is ready to serve your needs.
Our services include same day appliance repair, a free service call
with the repair, and service low-price guarantee. You always get
an itemized written appliance repair estimate, which must be approved
by you before we perform any work. Our dispatchers are available
to receive your call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at our Powder Springs, GA Appliance repair toll free number:
800 465-0352
Or send an Powder Springs, GA Appliance repair appointment request online
at appointment@powderspringsappliancerepair.com
To do so, please specify your name, address and a brief nature of
the problem. Once we receive your request we will contact you as
soon as possible.
We repair all brands major Applinces AC, and Heating
Maytag
Whirlpool
GE
Frigidaire
Speed Queen
Bosch
Hotpoint |
Bryant
York
Carrier
Caloric
RCA
Rheem
Ruud
|
O'Keefe and Merritt
Sunray
Thermador
Wedgewood
Jenn-Air
Sub-Zero
Tappan |
And many more appliance that we repair in Powder Springs, GA brands view the
full list
We provide appliance repair to all Powder Springs, GA zip codes and
surrounding cities. The following areas correspond to our appliance
service areas:
Atlanta
Smyrna
Marietta
Mableton
Acworth
Alpharetta
Austell
Avondale Estates
Clarkdale
Conley
Conyers
|
Riverdale
Ellenwood
Pantersville
Redan
Dallas
Douglasville
Emerson
Fairburn
Fayetteville
Grayson
Griffin
|
North Atlanta
Hampton
Hiram
Jonesboro
Kennesaw
Lawrenceville
Lebanon
Duluth
North Metro
Decatur
Roswell
|
And more view the rest of the Powder Springs, GA Appliance repair areas
we service
Appliance Diagrams
The appliance timer motor should always indicate continuity and not be grounded. Appliance motors are usually easy to check and they may in most cases be detached from the appliance timer body. Cams are seldom defective, unless they should break, an unlikely occurrence. The appliance drive train may be checked visually. As for the appliance switch contacts, even though there may be twenty contacts within the appliance timer, you've only got one symptom or one appliance problem, and by looking at the appliance wiring diagram you can eliminate all but one or possibly two sets of these contacts. A point to point check with the VOM should then indicate whether they are at appliance fault.
Again, the key word is simplify. If you are going on a trip and consult the road map, you don't try to take in all of the lines tracing roadways within an entire state. You find your destination and disregard all routes except the one which will lead you to that point. When you look at the appliance wiring schematic it is easy to become confused by the maze of appliance electrical circuits pictured; yet you should only be interested in a very small portion of that web. Just as you would use a road map, you should first locate your destination (the appliance part which is not operating) and plot your course from one side of the power line, through the part which is inoperative, to the other side of the appliance power line. In this manner you have plotted a complete electrical circuit, since you have passed from one side of the line to the other; and you will find that this "routing" procedure takes you through every appliance switch and connection which could cause the problem component to be inoperative. Now, by taking your meter and checking only those appliance components involved in your route, you should be able to pinpoint the faulty one.
There are two assets on your side that ease this procedure. The first of these is your own powers of deduction—where the Sherlock Holmes in you comes out. When you first became aware of the problem with the appliance, your first observation will give you many clues to the solution of the case. You will learn to make a mental note of every one of these, and then pursue them further to eliminate various appliance components which may not be at fault. As an example of this procedure, you find that the appliance motor is not running on your automatic washer. You note the position of the appliance timer dial when it stopped, and the setting of other appliance controls. When you find the motor on the wiring appliance diagram, you see that it also has two speeds other than the high speed used on the appliance normal cycle. Turning the appliance on and placing the timer in another cycle allows you to see that the appliance motor does operate on the medium and low speeds. Now, returning to the appliance diagram and tracing the circuit through the conductor marked "high" to the motor, you see that this is controlled by a appliance switch on the console of the washer and by a contact within the timer. Since the appliance diagram shows you which timer contact is involved, this is the only timer test you have to make
800 465-0352
We constantly work hard to deliver excellent customer service and
we are proud to provide 100 % Satisfaction Guarantee for all our
work
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