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West Perrine HVAC Company

West Perrine HVAC Company

West Perrine, FL
Emergency HVAC Services

Phone : (888) 996-4787

Based in West Perrine, Florida, West Perrine HVAC Company delivers HVAC service for apartments, single-family homes, and small commercial spaces. The team understands local climate demands and system wear.
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FAQs

Our air conditioner is original to our 1975 West Perrine home. Is it nearing the end of its service life?

Units installed in the late 1970s are approximately 51 years old, far exceeding a typical 15-20 year lifespan. In our coastal climate, salt-air induced condenser coil corrosion accelerates wear dramatically. This corrosion, combined with decades of thermal cycling, degrades the refrigerant circuit's integrity. A system this age operates inefficiently and is prone to complete failure, especially during a prolonged heatwave.

With ozone alerts and March pollen, can our older fiberboard and flex ductwork handle a high-MERV filter?

Addressing ozone and pollen requires MERV-13 filtration, but your existing fiberboard ducts present a static pressure challenge. Their rough interior surface creates more airflow resistance than modern sealed metal duct. Installing a high-MERV filter in this system often requires a blower motor upgrade to maintain proper CFM. A technician should perform a static pressure test before selecting a filter to avoid starving the evaporator coil of airflow.

Why does our AC struggle to keep the house below 78°F when it's 95°F outside?

Your system is designed for a 91°F outdoor temperature, per Miami-Dade's Manual J calculation. On days exceeding 95°F, the capacity drops and the delta T across the coil narrows. Modern units using R-454B refrigerant maintain better performance in this high-side pressure regime than older R-410A systems. Proper sizing accounts for this design limit; an oversized unit won't solve humidity removal during more typical 90°F days.

We use expensive electric resistance heat. Should we switch to a heat pump for our West Perrine winters?

Yes, a heat pump is highly advisable. Even with our mild 50°F winter lows, electric strip heat is 100% efficient, while a modern heat pump delivers 300-400% efficiency (COP of 3-4). This drastically cuts heating costs during FPL's peak hours (12:00-21:00). A properly sized, cold-climate heat pump using R-454B will provide efficient heat down to about 5°F, eliminating your reliance on costly strips for all but the briefest, deepest temperature dips.

We're told we need a 15 SEER2 system. What does that mean for our monthly bill, and are there rebates?

The 15.0 SEER2 minimum is a 2026 federal efficiency standard. Upgrading from a 10 SEER system to a 16 SEER2 unit can reduce cooling costs by about 20%. With FPL rates near $0.14/kWh, this is a tangible saving. The active Inflation Reduction Act (HEEHRA) rebate provides up to $8,000 for qualified high-efficiency installations, which often covers the performance premium over a baseline system.

What should we know about permits and the new refrigerant for a 2026 AC replacement?

All replacements require a permit from the Miami-Dade County Department of Regulatory and Economic Resources. As of 2026, new systems predominantly use A2L refrigerants like R-454B, which are mildly flammable. This mandates compliance with strict new safety standards (UL 60335-2-40) governing leak detection, installation clearances, and room size calculations. Your contractor must be EPA 608 certified and trained in A2L handling. The permit process verifies this and ensures the installation meets current Florida Building Code and energy efficiency mandates.

Our AC stopped cooling on a Saturday afternoon. How quickly can a technician typically get to a home near Cuyahoga Park?

For a no-cool emergency in West Perrine, dispatch from a shop near the Florida Turnpike allows a 15-25 minute response window to your neighborhood. Technicians route via SW 168th Street for direct access to the Cuyahoga Park area. We prioritize these calls to prevent indoor humidity from spiking above 60%, which can quickly lead to mold growth on porous surfaces.

Our Ecobee thermostat is showing an 'E1 (No Power to R)' alert. What does this mean?

An Ecobee E1 alert indicates a loss of 24VAC power from the R terminal on your indoor air handler control board. In West Perrine, this is commonly caused by a tripped float switch due to a clogged condensate drain line—a frequent issue in high humidity. It can also signal a failed transformer or a safety switch opening from salt-air corrosion on the condenser's high-pressure switch. This alert prevents compressor operation to avoid damage, requiring a technician to diagnose the specific open circuit.

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