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Old Fig Garden HVAC Company

Old Fig Garden HVAC Company

Old Fig Garden, CA
Emergency HVAC Services

Phone : (888) 996-4787

Serving Old Fig Garden, California, Old Fig Garden HVAC Company provides heating and cooling support for residential systems. The goal is steady service, clear communication, and reliable results.
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Q&A

My AC is as old as my house. Is that why it fails every summer?

Systems in Old Fig Garden homes, averaging from 1954, are now about 72 years old, which is well beyond a typical 15-20 year service life. This age directly contributes to component degradation, specifically making the capacitor highly susceptible to failure during our extreme heat cycles. The constant thermal expansion and contraction over decades weakens the capacitor's internal seals, leading to the common no-cool emergency calls we see each July.

With high electric rates, does switching from my gas furnace to a heat pump make sense here?

The economics hinge on the heat pump's cold-climate performance and time-of-use rates. Modern units maintain high efficiency down to our winter lows, and operation can be scheduled outside PG&E's 4 PM to 9 PM peak rate window. When paired with the IRA tax credit, the switch often proves cost-effective, providing both heating and cooling with a single, high-efficiency system while moving away from fossil fuel combustion.

My Ecobee thermostat is showing an 'E1' alert. What does that mean for my system?

An Ecobee E1 code indicates a loss of communication with your HVAC equipment, often triggered by a power interruption at the air handler or furnace. In Old Fig Garden, this is frequently the first sign of a capacitor failing under heat stress or a condensate safety switch tripping due to a clogged drain line. It's a diagnostic signal advising a professional check of the low-voltage control circuit before a complete system shutdown occurs.

Can my old sheet metal ducts handle a high-grade filter for wildfire smoke and spring pollen?

Your existing galvanized sheet metal ductwork has a robust structure, but its design did not account for modern high-static filtration. Installing a MERV-13 filter for PM2.5 and pollen mitigation will likely increase static pressure beyond the blower's capacity, reducing airflow and causing icing or premature failure. A proper assessment of your duct system's static pressure is required before upgrading filtration beyond MERV-8.

What should I know about permits and safety for a new AC install in 2026?

All replacements in Fresno require a permit from the City of Fresno Development and Resource Management Department, which ensures compliance with current codes. Crucially, 2026 standards mandate specific safety protocols for the mildly flammable A2L refrigerants like R-454B, including leak detectors, updated service practices, and specialized equipment. A licensed contractor will handle this permitting and adhere to the new UL 60335-2-40 safety standard for the installation.

Is the new 14.3 SEER2 minimum worth the upgrade cost with today's electricity prices?

Absolutely, given Fresno's 36-cent per kilowatt-hour rate. A modern system meeting the 2026 SEER2 standard will consume significantly less energy than your existing unit. The federal Inflation Reduction Act (HEEHRA) rebate, with an $8,000 cap, directly offsets this capital investment, improving the payback period. The combined operational savings and upfront incentive make this a strategic upgrade for long-term cost control.

Why does my AC struggle when it's over 100 degrees, even if it's running?

Residential systems in Fresno are engineered to a 104°F design temperature, which is the expected peak outdoor condition they must handle. When ambient temperatures meet or exceed this limit, the system's capacity to reject heat diminishes, reducing its cooling output. The newer R-454B refrigerant standard for 2026 offers slightly better high-ambient performance than older refrigerants, but all systems will see reduced efficiency at these extremes.

If my AC quits on a 105°F day, how fast can a technician get here?

For a no-cool emergency in Old Fig Garden, our dispatch uses Fig Garden Village as a central reference point off CA-41, enabling a consistent 15-20 minute response window. We prioritize these calls during heat events because prolonged loss of cooling in an aged home can lead to rapid indoor temperature spikes and humidity ingress, stressing occupants and belongings.

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