Pre-arrival dispatch record
Our Anaheim worksheet starts with neighborhood access. Anaheim Hills calls often need different parking and arrival notes than The Colony; Platinum Triangle gets its own entry so the truck brings the right recovery cylinder, vacuum pump, gauges, thermostat adapter, and service ladder on the first pass.
Building and comfort profile
A Anaheim page should not imply one equipment answer for every home. Our notes split Anaheim Hills from The Colony, call out additions and garage conversions, and document whether the complaint is capacity, noise, humidity, safety, efficiency, or failed operation before pricing duct cleaning.
Code and close-out path
The compliance path matters on duct cleaning calls. We attach CA code notes, job photos, startup readings, and customer approvals to the record so a Anaheim homeowner can see what changed, why it changed, and what paperwork remains.
Rebate and incentive check
Federal Inflation Reduction Act is checked because Up to $2,000 federal tax credit for heat pump installations through 2032. If the Anaheim job qualifies, the technician captures model numbers, AHRI matches where relevant, serial numbers, and customer approval so incentive paperwork does not become a separate scramble after installation.
Diagnostic watch item
One reason duct cleaning gets misquoted is that mold growth on interior duct walls can look like a larger failure. Our Anaheim diagnostic path starts with readings and conditions, then uses the finding to decide whether the fix is a part, adjustment, cleaning, control change, or replacement discussion.
Customer handoff
After duct cleaning, the technician records what was tested, what was changed, and what should be watched next season. Anaheim customers get the practical version: filter timing, thermostat notes, warning signs, and whether follow-up should happen before peak weather.
Parts and warranty record
For Anaheim jobs, the parts note separates emergency repair stock from upgrade material. That distinction matters for duct cleaning: a failed component, an airflow correction, a controls change, and an efficiency replacement should not be presented as the same solution.