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NotGolfer 11-20-2020 12:34 PM

dryer vent cleaning
 
I've scrolled through several threads trying to find recommendations for a company or handyman who will come and clean out our dryer vent. Can anyone here help? Also would like to know a price range and contact info as well. I checked my NextDoor as well as the phone book and only came up with Jonathan's in Wildwood. If anyone has had them would you recommend them??

retiredguy123 11-20-2020 01:32 PM

Desmond Harris, 352-308-7457, if he is still in business. It should cost less than $100.

Carla B 11-20-2020 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by retiredguy123 (Post 1863424)
Desmond Harris, 352-308-7457, if he is still in business. It should cost less than $100.

Yes, an employee of Desmond's cleaned our dryer vent last part of September, and for less than $100.

Opmoochler 11-20-2020 03:06 PM

vent cleaning
 
Desmond Harris has done our dryer vent for the last 5 years. They will also replace smoke detector batteries as long as you have a new package of batteries to give them to use. This summer, they cleaned all of our AC vents.

kfierle 11-20-2020 04:38 PM

Desmond cleaned my dryer vent and replaced all the smoke alarm batteries as well as the batteries in the garage remote keypad and irrigation controller. Total cost was $60.

bagboy 11-20-2020 05:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kfierle (Post 1863500)
Desmond cleaned my dryer vent and replaced all the smoke alarm batteries as well as the batteries in the garage remote keypad and irrigation controller. Total cost was $60.

Covenant - Desmond Harris just cleaned our dryer vent for $60. Tech was Jason.

Navy (SSBN 633) 11-20-2020 10:35 PM

Harris never returned my phone call. Used Docs Restoration...great job...about $78 with Coupon from their web site.

CTFORSBERG 11-21-2020 05:50 AM

Call Jonathan at 352-568-5629
He’s the nicest young man and very good!

prendymom 11-21-2020 05:53 AM

We used "Complete Dryer Vent Services,LLC. He is insured & CSIA Certified. Which means he is a Certified Chimney Sweep. Not that we have chimneys, But, he was the best person we used since we lived here the past 9 years. He was here for over an hour, pulled out the dryer blew it out from the bottom up & then went up to the roof & cleaned out the vent up there. He took pictures of all that he did & gave us the pictures. We both were amazed at the build up as we both are diligent in cleaning our dryer after each use. Which mean the other people didn't do a thorough job! The cost was well worth it @ $123. $23 was for the new hose. He also installs a new dryer exhaust hose that doesn't kink. #352-653-0809. We recommended him to our friends & everyone said WOW he was good :)Ya get what pay for & this is a safety factor so you don't get build up in the vent/hose/roof vent. Next year it will only be $100.

JudyLife 11-21-2020 06:14 AM

Yes I used Desmond Harris a year ago. Very efficient and he charged $60. His number is listed in another reply below.

wirenail444 11-21-2020 06:50 AM

Call "all about appliances". Cost $80. Does good work

Gingerstar 11-21-2020 07:02 AM

Desmond Harris, 352-308-7457. Have used him for years. Very happy with him
 
Desmond Harris, 352-308-7457. Have used him for years. Very happy with him

MandoMan 11-21-2020 07:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NotGolfer (Post 1863399)
I've scrolled through several threads trying to find recommendations for a company or handyman who will come and clean out our dryer vent. Can anyone here help? Also would like to know a price range and contact info as well. I checked my NextDoor as well as the phone book and only came up with Jonathan's in Wildwood. If anyone has had them would you recommend them??

I don’t know about your house, but in my house, the dryer vent pipe is metal and goes straight up the wall, through the attic, and onto the roof. It’s difficult for lint to catch on it, unlike a long, flexible plastic dryer hose that snakes through an attic and comes out of a wall twenty feet away. I empty the lint trap after every dryer load. I assume that you do, too.

Have you noticed that it is taking longer for your clothes to dry than it used to, or that they used to get dry at one setting, but now they don’t? Probably not.

If you have a metal vent pipe with a clear run, if you clean your link trap faithfully, and if your dryer is working normally, you really don’t need your dryer vent pipe cleaned, especially if you don’t use the hot setting on your dryer (I never do—it’s hard on the clothes). How is it going to catch on fire if the maximum air temperature is nowhere near the temperature needed for combustion? Companies are happy to clean the pipe for you, but you are wasting your money. Dryer lint traps these days tend to be very effective.

As for cleaning your heating and air conditioning pipes, that is also really unnecessary so long as you replace the air filter a couple times a year, especially if it’s a high quality filter. The filter catches nearly everything. If your HVAC system is like mine, here is what you have. There is a big return air grille in your living room near the garage. That sucks air down a big rectangular foil-covered fiberglass board duct about eight feet to the air filter, where almost any dust is filtered out. You would need several inches of dust on those duct walls to impede the air flow, and that is not going to happen.

After being filtered, the dust-free air is sent by fan back up a similar fiberglass board duct into the attic, where it is distributed into several round flexible pipes with wire springs inside to keep them from collapsing. These have plastic walls on both the inside and the outside and an inch of fiberglass in between the layers of plastic. Even if there WERE dust in that air, it isn’t going to easily stick to the plastic.

Thus, having your HVAC system pipes cleaned is really money down the drain. The companies will happily take your money, but it is a triumph of advertising over necessity. There is also some danger that vacuuming out the rectangular fiberglass board pipes can loosen fiberglass on the walls of that pipe and allow it to float through the ducts and into the air and then into your lungs. (This fiberglass board is made from a mixture of fiberglass and glue with thin foil on the outside. The inside is bare fiberglass. Rubbing it can break off pieces of this glass fiber. Your attic is filled with these glass fibers, and this fiberglass dust is quite unhealthy.

bobnyce 11-21-2020 07:30 AM

Dryer vent
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by NotGolfer (Post 1863399)
I've scrolled through several threads trying to find recommendations for a company or handyman who will come and clean out our dryer vent. Can anyone here help? Also would like to know a price range and contact info as well. I checked my NextDoor as well as the phone book and only came up with Jonathan's in Wildwood. If anyone has had them would you recommend them??

I have wanted to eliminate my “through the roof” dryer vert ever since we bought our house 8 years ago! Guess what, I found Kiley & Son Plumbing will do it. In my case had to pass tgrough a cabinet to the garage and then exit the outside wall. Dryer works so much better, easier to clean and only about 10 ft long end to end. Can use my iown brush and do it as often as I want since it is at floor level. No more fear of attic fire! Most cost was labor and aluminum pipe! Call Kiley! I did and am very happy with my Corpus Christi results. My dryer sighed in relief - no more pushing air 30 feet thru the wall, attic and roof!

graciegirl 11-21-2020 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by retiredguy123 (Post 1863424)
Desmond Harris, 352-308-7457, if he is still in business. It should cost less than $100.

He is the man. Very dependable and ethical and more like fifty bucks. He may not be entering homes now. I don't know.

photo1902 11-21-2020 07:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by graciegirl (Post 1863642)
He is the man. Very dependable and ethical and more like fifty bucks. He may not be entering homes now. I don't know.

Just had ours done by Covenant last week. $60

photo1902 11-21-2020 07:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Choro&Swing (Post 1863634)
I don’t know about your house, but in my house, the dryer vent pipe is metal and goes straight up the wall, through the attic, and onto the roof. It’s difficult for lint to catch on it, unlike a long, flexible plastic dryer hose that snakes through an attic and comes out of a wall twenty feet away. I empty the lint trap after every dryer load. I assume that you do, too.

Have you noticed that it is taking longer for your clothes to dry than it used to, or that they used to get dry at one setting, but now they don’t? Probably not.

If you have a metal vent pipe with a clear run, if you clean your link trap faithfully, and if your dryer is working normally, you really don’t need your dryer vent pipe cleaned, especially if you don’t use the hot setting on your dryer (I never do—it’s hard on the clothes). How is it going to catch on fire if the maximum air temperature is nowhere near the temperature needed for combustion? Companies are happy to clean the pipe for you, but you are wasting your money. Dryer lint traps these days tend to be very effective.

As for cleaning your heating and air conditioning pipes, that is also really unnecessary so long as you replace the air filter a couple times a year, especially if it’s a high quality filter. The filter catches nearly everything. If your HVAC system is like mine, here is what you have. There is a big return air grille in your living room near the garage. That sucks air down a big rectangular foil-covered fiberglass board duct about eight feet to the air filter, where almost any dust is filtered out. You would need several inches of dust on those duct walls to impede the air flow, and that is not going to happen.

After being filtered, the dust-free air is sent by fan back up a similar fiberglass board duct into the attic, where it is distributed into several round flexible pipes with wire springs inside to keep them from collapsing. These have plastic walls on both the inside and the outside and an inch of fiberglass in between the layers of plastic. Even if there WERE dust in that air, it isn’t going to easily stick to the plastic.

Thus, having your HVAC system pipes cleaned is really money down the drain. The companies will happily take your money, but it is a triumph of advertising over necessity. There is also some danger that vacuuming out the rectangular fiberglass board pipes can loosen fiberglass on the walls of that pipe and allow it to float through the ducts and into the air and then into your lungs. (This fiberglass board is made from a mixture of fiberglass and glue with thin foil on the outside. The inside is bare fiberglass. Rubbing it can break off pieces of this glass fiber. Your attic is filled with these glass fibers, and this fiberglass dust is quite unhealthy.

Bad advice reference dryer vent cleaning.

Singerlady 11-21-2020 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by prendymom (Post 1863600)
We used "Complete Dryer Vent Services,LLC. He is insured & CSIA Certified. Which means he is a Certified Chimney Sweep. Not that we have chimneys, But, he was the best person we used since we lived here the past 9 years. He was here for over an hour, pulled out the dryer blew it out from the bottom up & then went up to the roof & cleaned out the vent up there. He took pictures of all that he did & gave us the pictures. We both were amazed at the build up as we both are diligent in cleaning our dryer after each use. Which mean the other people didn't do a thorough job! The cost was well worth it @ $123. $23 was for the new hose. He also installs a new dryer exhaust hose that doesn't kink. #352-653-0809. We recommended him to our friends & everyone said WOW he was good :)Ya get what pay for & this is a safety factor so you don't get build up in the vent/hose/roof vent. Next year it will only be $100.

DITTO to Gus from Complete Dryer Vent Services!

howiethehook 11-21-2020 07:46 AM

Desmond Harris is excellent, reliable, thorough and reasonable (352) 308-9243

retiredguy123 11-21-2020 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Choro&Swing (Post 1863634)
I don’t know about your house, but in my house, the dryer vent pipe is metal and goes straight up the wall, through the attic, and onto the roof. It’s difficult for lint to catch on it, unlike a long, flexible plastic dryer hose that snakes through an attic and comes out of a wall twenty feet away. I empty the lint trap after every dryer load. I assume that you do, too.

Have you noticed that it is taking longer for your clothes to dry than it used to, or that they used to get dry at one setting, but now they don’t? Probably not.

If you have a metal vent pipe with a clear run, if you clean your link trap faithfully, and if your dryer is working normally, you really don’t need your dryer vent pipe cleaned, especially if you don’t use the hot setting on your dryer (I never do—it’s hard on the clothes). How is it going to catch on fire if the maximum air temperature is nowhere near the temperature needed for combustion? Companies are happy to clean the pipe for you, but you are wasting your money. Dryer lint traps these days tend to be very effective.

As for cleaning your heating and air conditioning pipes, that is also really unnecessary so long as you replace the air filter a couple times a year, especially if it’s a high quality filter. The filter catches nearly everything. If your HVAC system is like mine, here is what you have. There is a big return air grille in your living room near the garage. That sucks air down a big rectangular foil-covered fiberglass board duct about eight feet to the air filter, where almost any dust is filtered out. You would need several inches of dust on those duct walls to impede the air flow, and that is not going to happen.

After being filtered, the dust-free air is sent by fan back up a similar fiberglass board duct into the attic, where it is distributed into several round flexible pipes with wire springs inside to keep them from collapsing. These have plastic walls on both the inside and the outside and an inch of fiberglass in between the layers of plastic. Even if there WERE dust in that air, it isn’t going to easily stick to the plastic.

Thus, having your HVAC system pipes cleaned is really money down the drain. The companies will happily take your money, but it is a triumph of advertising over necessity. There is also some danger that vacuuming out the rectangular fiberglass board pipes can loosen fiberglass on the walls of that pipe and allow it to float through the ducts and into the air and then into your lungs. (This fiberglass board is made from a mixture of fiberglass and glue with thin foil on the outside. The inside is bare fiberglass. Rubbing it can break off pieces of this glass fiber. Your attic is filled with these glass fibers, and this fiberglass dust is quite unhealthy.

I agree that cleaning the HVAC ducts is a water of money, and it could result in the contractor puncturing a flexible duct.

But, I don't agree that cleaning a dryer vent is never needed. There are many ways that the dryer vent can become clogged and can actually cause a fire in the house. Humidity can cause the lint to clump together and collect in a vent pipe fitting, birds can build a nest in the gooseneck fitting on the roof, or a wasp nest can be constructed there. The duct is metal, but there can be a hole or a fitting separation that allows hot air to escape and cause a fire. If a dryer is getting hot but taking a long time to dry clothes, the vent needs to be inspected and cleaned out. A clogged dryer vent definitely has the potential to cause a house fire.

Here is a statistic from the NFPA.

According to the National Fire Protection Association, nearly 17,000 home clothes dryer fires are reported each year. These clothes dryer fires cause around 51 deaths, 380 injuries, and $236 million in property loss. Unsurprisingly, the leading cause of these fires, at 34%, is the failure to clean dryer vents.Jan 26, 2017

Grill Meister 11-21-2020 07:53 AM

Covenant Janitorial Desmond Harris, Owner, does an outstanding job of: dryer vent cleaning (to prevent house fires), driveway sealing, handy-man work.... you name it. Desmond is one of the most conscientious men you can have the pleasure of meeting. You can't but help liking him and wanting to take care of your handy-man projects. Desmond Harris, Covenant Janitorial, LLC, (352) 308-7457, Nextel 162*31528*6

merrymini 11-21-2020 08:14 AM

I called covenant and never got a call back. I did use Docs and they were wonderful and will use them again. My dryer vent goes through the roof and I am diligent about cleaning the screen but there is still a build up. Dryer vents should not be more than eight feet long, as it affects the dryers abilities. New towels are also big lint problems in a dryer.

dbressette1 11-21-2020 08:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NotGolfer (Post 1863399)
I've scrolled through several threads trying to find recommendations for a company or handyman who will come and clean out our dryer vent. Can anyone here help? Also would like to know a price range and contact info as well. I checked my NextDoor as well as the phone book and only came up with Jonathan's in Wildwood. If anyone has had them would you recommend them??

I would just put a new one on its just a clamp on each end

ogme480 11-21-2020 08:33 AM

We used Jonathan's and were very pleased. Punctual, thorough & reasonably priced.

TedfromGA 11-21-2020 08:34 AM

3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by prendymom (Post 1863600)
We used "Complete Dryer Vent Services,LLC. He is insured & CSIA Certified. Which means he is a Certified Chimney Sweep. Not that we have chimneys, But, he was the best person we used since we lived here the past 9 years. He was here for over an hour, pulled out the dryer blew it out from the bottom up & then went up to the roof & cleaned out the vent up there. He took pictures of all that he did & gave us the pictures. We both were amazed at the build up as we both are diligent in cleaning our dryer after each use. Which mean the other people didn't do a thorough job! The cost was well worth it @ $123. $23 was for the new hose. He also installs a new dryer exhaust hose that doesn't kink. #352-653-0809. We recommended him to our friends & everyone said WOW he was good :)Ya get what pay for & this is a safety factor so you don't get build up in the vent/hose/roof vent. Next year it will only be $100.

We also used "Complete Dryer Vent". Yes more expensive, but documented insured and rated. Attached photos show lint buildup before cleaning. House is ~9 years old - probably never cleaned. Photos document lint buildup in vertical vent pipe as well as the roof outlet.

Jensor17 11-21-2020 08:41 AM

Wright way duct cleaning. $79. Fast polite efficient. And cleaned out whole area under appliance 352-483-5545

NoMoSno 11-21-2020 09:00 AM

https://www.lowes.com/pd/LintEater-D...l-Kit/50371148

Roxane 11-21-2020 10:03 AM

Dryer vent cleaning
 
Mark Burnett
352-250-0727

neelie 11-21-2020 10:05 AM

Call Tom Wright Wright Way Duct Cleaning 1-352-562-2939
He also does dryer vents

Alicia 11-21-2020 10:25 AM

Yes very good

rugbyjohn 11-21-2020 10:36 AM

I used Doc's Restoration, Handyman Services. 352-753-0056. Great job, worker fully masked, professional and on time. You can also find a 10% off coupon in the paper for their Handyman Services.

mark100 11-21-2020 10:54 AM

Duct cleaning
 
We used Doc's Restoration. Great service. Had a coupon for $69.00.
Regularly about $80-90 without one check your newspaper for a rate reduction ad.

Villages Kahuna 11-21-2020 11:28 AM

All kinds advertising in the Daily Sun. Usually less than $100.

bonniemanross 11-21-2020 11:37 AM

Dryer Vent Cleaning
 
I used Doc's Restoration on my home and my rental that I own. They did an awesome job. Very professional, they might have a coupon in there AD's in the Daily Sun.

hobart 11-21-2020 11:57 AM

dryer vent cleaning
 
Joshua Brosius
Ocala - 352-282-0158
He is also a chimney sweep for woodstoves, fireplaces and dryer vents

DanBrew 11-21-2020 12:17 PM

Dryer Vent Cleaning
 
I do my own once a year and use my leaf blower. Piece of cake.

rphil11ort 11-21-2020 12:25 PM

the solar guys clear vents too

Shutterbug 11-21-2020 12:30 PM

I bought a kit at Ace Hardware and did it myself. Very easy.

frank fussa 11-21-2020 01:45 PM

Dryer vent cleaning
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Shutterbug (Post 1863822)
I bought a kit at Ace Hardware and did it myself. Very easy.

Mikes home repair many satisfied customers in the Village’s 631 561 5665

mjpuleo 11-21-2020 01:53 PM

I also have used Desmond Harris for many years and have just moved and glad to see he is still in business so I can still call him.


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