Terms of Service

Effective Date: May 23, 2026.

Welcome to Chilly Pro HVAC. We built this site to cut through the noise and give you straight answers about your heating and cooling systems. We operate on trust, precision, and real field experience. Before you read our diagnostic guides or equipment reviews, you need to understand the rules of this website.

By accessing chillyprohvac.com, you agree to be bound by these terms. Read them carefully. If you do not agree with our rules, you must leave the site immediately.

The Reality of HVAC Information

Let us talk about the reality of heating and cooling equipment. Your furnace burns combustible gas. Your air conditioner runs on 240 volts of electricity. Your heat pump circulates refrigerant under intense pressure. This website exists to illuminate the blind spots in your understanding. We help you diagnose the weird rattling sound in your blower motor. We explain why your evaporator coil keeps turning into a block of ice. We give you the vocabulary to hold your local service technician accountable.

We do not replace that technician.

Reading a guide on chillyprohvac.com does not make you a licensed contractor. You cannot pull a vacuum on a refrigerant line with internet advice. You need EPA certification. You need the right gauges. You need hands-on experience. Our content is strictly for educational and informational purposes. Use our guides to understand your system. Hire a local, insured, licensed professional to execute the actual repairs.

Intellectual Property and Our Hard Work

We built this site from the ground up. We spend hours writing these diagnostic breakdowns. We pull parts off dead condensers. We photograph cracked heat exchangers. We document the exact sequence of operations for modern variable-speed air handlers. Every word, image, and diagram on this domain belongs to Chilly Pro HVAC.

Do not copy our content.

We see lazy websites scrape our hard-earned field knowledge. We do not tolerate it. If you republish our troubleshooting guides, we will issue immediate DMCA takedown notices to your host. We protect our intellectual property aggressively. You may link to our articles. You may quote a few sentences with clear attribution. You may not steal our work to build your own site.

User Conduct and Community Standards

We occasionally open articles for comments. We want to hear your experiences with different HVAC brands. We want to know if a specific troubleshooting step worked for your system. We demand basic respect in these interactions.

Treat our comment section like a professional job site. Do not post spam. Do not paste links to sketchy contractor directories. Do not insult other readers who are trying to understand their thermostats. We delete garbage comments immediately. We ban users who cannot maintain a basic level of decency. We run a clean, focused operation. We expect our readers to respect that environment.

Affiliate Links and Gear Recommendations

We recommend specific tools and maintenance products throughout this site. You will see links to multimeters, coil cleaners, and specific MERV-rated filters. We buy these items ourselves. We keep them in our service bags. We test them in hot attics and freezing basements.

Some of these links are affiliate links. If you click one and make a purchase, we earn a small commission. This costs you nothing extra. It helps keep this site running. We never recommend cheap junk just to make a quick buck. If a tool fails after three weeks on the job, we tell you. If a filter restricts airflow too much, we warn you. Our reputation matters more than a tiny commission check.

Limitation of Liability

You are responsible for your own home. You are responsible for your own safety. We provide high-resolution information about HVAC systems. How you apply that information is entirely up to you.

Maybe you read our guide on clearing a clogged condensate drain. You decide to blow compressed air through the old PVC pipe. You blow the pipe apart and flood your ceiling. We are not liable for those damages. Maybe you try to test a dual run capacitor without discharging it first. You get a nasty shock. We are not liable for your injuries.

We offer no warranties, express or implied, regarding the accuracy or completeness of our content. Equipment changes. Manufacturers update their specifications. A diagnostic step that works on an older Trane unit might not apply to a brand new Bosch heat pump. You must verify all information against your specific equipment manual. We accept zero financial or legal responsibility for your actions, your equipment failures, or your repair bills.

Governing Law and Dispute Resolution

We operate out of Arizona. The laws of the State of Arizona govern these terms. If you decide to pick a legal fight with us over a troubleshooting guide, you will do it in our local jurisdiction. We expect common sense to prevail long before lawyers get involved.

Changes to These Rules

The HVAC industry evolves. Refrigerant regulations change. Equipment standards shift. Our website changes right alongside them. We reserve the right to update these terms at any time. When we make changes, we update the effective date at the top of this page. Your continued use of the site means you accept the new rules.

Contacting Us

You might have questions about these terms. You might want to clarify how we use affiliate links. You can reach us directly.

  • Email: [email protected]
  • Response Time: We check this inbox twice a week. We respond to legitimate inquiries within three business days.

Do not use this email to ask for free repair advice. We cannot diagnose your broken compressor over email. Call your local technician.