Summer hadn’t even officially started when I talked with Jim Kelley, regional sales manager of NuTemp, Newark, DE, and he was already hopping. With a territory stretching from New Jersey to Maine, Kelley keeps very busy moving his inventory of portable cooling equipment from one point to the next in as little time as possible.
Emergency situations, such as when a building unexpectedly loses its cooling, often come up in the summertime. That’s when buildings typically start up their cooling systems and expect them to immediately work at 100% capacity. If the equipment sat idle all winter with little or no maintenance, there’s a possibility that it won’t start up at all.