Blog Archives

Give Your Air Conditioner a Check Up [Beat The Heat]

Modern air conditioning units are quite dependable and long lived, but that doesn’t mean you can install one and forget about it. If you’ve never given your air conditioner a checkup, now’s the time.

Photo by macinate.

There are a dozen little things that can contribute to your air conditioner being less efficient than when it was factory fresh. Worn fan belts, bent cooling fins, damaged insulation on the coolant line, and other small signs of wear and tear on your unit all chip away at efficiency. Individually, most of them won’t contribute to a catastrophic loss of cooling power but if you’ve got ten minor things wrong with your air conditioning unit that only sap 1% efficiency, you’ve got a cumulative drop of 10%.

At the home improvement site HomeOwner.Net they have a list of ways you can tune up your air conditioning unit whether you’re using an evaporation “swamp” cooler or a refrigerated air conditioning unit. Here are a few tips from the checklist for refrigerated units:

  • Be sure the suction or cool line from the condenser to the compressor is insulated with snap-on urethane or other high R-value insulation.
  • Straighten all of the evaporator and condenser coil fins with a small pointed stick or a special plastic fin comb. Bent fins do not allow proper air distribution.
  • If the condenser is at ground level, be sure no vegetation or foreign material is restricting the air flow path. If possible, shade the condenser with trees or bushes, which will improve the cooling efficiency by elimination of direct sunshine.

I went through the checklist with my own air conditioning unit and found that exposure to sunlight had caused the insulation around the coolant pipe going into the house to start crumbling and there are a few spots that could use a little grooming with a fin comb. If your unit is more than a year old you’ll likely be able to find a few items off the checklist that require your attention. Once you’re done with your air conditioner checkup you’ll have lowered your energy bill and made your house an even more pleasant refuge from the summer sun.





Clean Your Laptop to Keep It Running Smooth and Cool [Cleaning]

Taking time out to evacuate your PC’s dust bunnies is a must for keeping your computer running in tip-top shape. If you’re not the desktop sort, DIY site Instructables details how to banish dust from your laptop.

The more dust that collects inside your computer, the hotter it'll run. The hotter it runs, the sooner it'll die. What's more, that accumulated dust has probably caused your fan to run more often and louder than it needs to. As you can imagine, then, a clean computer is a happy computer—which is where this Instructable guide comes in handy.

Granted, the inside of one laptop may vary greatly from the inside of another, but—as the author of this Instructable points out—the same basic ideas apply, so if you practice a little common sense you should be fine. While you're at it, if you feel your desktop computer is in need of some serious cleaning, check out how to clean your PC for more.





Run Disk Cleanup Automatically at Startup [Automation]

The CyberNet tech blog details how to create a set-it-and-forget-it scheduled task to automatically run Disk Cleanup every time your computer starts.

The setup requires a few steps, starting with running Disk Cleanup from the command line with the /sageset:1 parameter to choose your settings, and then creating a scheduled task with the /sagerun:1 option to automatically run using the saved settings every time you start your computer.

If you’d prefer to use the reader favorite CCleaner to clean up your computer, we’ve already detailed how to run CCleaner silently with a shortcut, or run it automatically with a scheduled task, which could be adjusted to run on startup. For more on automated maintenance, check out how to create a self-repairing hard drive.






OpenWithView Edits Your Lengthy Open-With List [Featured Windows Download]

Windows only: Is your Open With context menu overflowing with apps you never use? OpenWithView is a simple, portable utility for culling unneeded entries from the list of suggested programs in Windows’ Open With dialog box.

OpenWithView lists every potential entry available as an Open With suggestion. From there you can enable and disable any item—although they can't be permanently deleted. The lack of deletion has no impact on the final result, however, which is a much cleaner Open With dialog box. You'll likely find entries for programs you've uninstalled and others that you'll likely never use. For more menu-cleaning goodness, check out how to declutter your Windows context menu and how to get rid of unused startup entries. OpenWithView is freeware, Windows only.






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