Join Luke Peterson, owner of Magnolia Home Comfort in Louisville, KY, as he shares invaluable insights on becoming a more thorough HVAC technician. In this enlightening presentation from our 5th Annual HVAC/R Training Symposium, Luke explores:

The importance of thoroughness in HVAC work
Common hindrances to being thorough
How to cultivate the right mindset for excellence
Practical tips for improving efficiency and reducing callbacks
The impact of thoroughness on customer satisfaction and career fulfillment

Whether you’re a seasoned pro or just starting in the field, Luke’s experience and practical advice will help you elevate your HVAC game. Learn how to sharpen your skills, streamline your processes, and provide top-notch service to your customers.

#HVAC #HVACTraining #Thoroughness #TechnicianTips #HVACSchool

Buy your virtual tickets or learn more about the 5th Annual HVACR Training Symposium at https://hvacrschool.com/symposium24.

Read all the tech tips, take the quizzes, and find our handy calculators at https://www.hvacrschool.com/ or the HVAC School Mobile App on the Google Play Store (https://hvacrschool.com/play-store) or App Store (https://hvacrschool.com/app-store).

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Comments

  • @andysantos8286
    Reply

    Thank you for the class.

  • @hazendismukesjr.8319
    Reply

    I went to machinest school and liked one class to get a certificate but was time for my son to go to college and I quit to let him be first and he graduated and I and he owed nothing which was great

  • @garypoplin4599
    Reply

    12:23 – I’ve been out of school many years and I still maintain a goal of learning 5 new words a week. It’s only Sunday and in already nearly half way then this week! Those are beautiful words, by the way. Thanks.
    32:12 – Duck Butter? What’s that? Doesn’t sound like anything I’ll ever use on a walk-in. Eager to learn, though.
    49:46 – Wow. I guess today’s the day for me to learn new terms! I think I got it from the context; but, I’d never heard the term spif before.

  • @eastcoast186
    Reply

    Thanks for the video

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    Bryan. Where did you go ?

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    My callbacks are by request..politness, professional performance and communication to customers, and job was completed .

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    Botton of evaporator is caked shut in a residential application, ( with dust, dirt), in a comercial application – greenery or growing environment evap coil – air flow – caked 100 % shut with mold growth between between fin rows.

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    Perishables are glues, tapes, soaps, sprays, drill bits, mapp and torch gases, CO2, Nitrogen, refrigerant cylinders, carbon or al kaline batteries, trash bags, wipes, hand sanitizers,.

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    A temperature split is nice with recorded ambient inside, outside, pressures and superheat, subcooling the day it is comissioned, so should a return call come up, the data is on record and should be with the service tech heading back.

  • @Barracuda48082
    Reply

    In the US we are called Techs, in Canada, the same job is titled Mechanic.

  • @YTsux24-7
    Reply

    Callbacks are the best opportunity to retrieve the tools you left behind on the last visit.😎👍

  • @kansascitychief4965
    Reply

    Callbacks could be reduced by not slamming a technician with 6-8 calls a day, giving him actual time to go over each call top to bottom.

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