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Fayette HVAC Company

Fayette HVAC Company

Fayette, OH
Emergency HVAC Services

Phone : (888) 996-4787

Fayette HVAC Company is a local provider offering AC and heating repair in Fayette, Ohio. The company services common system types found in the area and responds to urgent comfort issues year-round.
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Rich Joughin Plb&htg

Rich Joughin Plb&htg

27836 County Rd T, Fayette OH 43521
Heating & Air Conditioning/HVAC, Plumbing

Rich Joughin Plb&htg is your trusted, full-service HVAC and plumbing contractor serving Fayette and the surrounding area. We understand the local challenges homeowners face, including frustratingly hi...



FAQs

What are the permit and safety rules for a new AC installation in 2026?

All HVAC replacements in Fulton County require a permit from the Fulton County Building Department. Since January 2023, new regulations mandate that systems using A2L refrigerants like R-454B, which are mildly flammable, must include leak detectors and have specific service port requirements. Your installer must be EPA Section 608 certified for these refrigerants and follow the updated safety standards for placement and labeling.

My Ecobee thermostat is showing an E1 alert. What does that mean?

An Ecobee E1 alert indicates the thermostat has lost communication with your HVAC equipment. In Fayette, this is commonly caused by a safety lockout on the furnace control board due to a flame sensor issue, a condensate pump float switch triggering on a high-humidity day, or a tripped high-pressure switch on the outdoor unit. It's a signal to check for a system fault before a complete failure occurs.

What is the new SEER2 standard for 2026, and do rebates make an upgrade worthwhile?

The federal minimum efficiency standard is now 13.4 SEER2 for new central air conditioners and heat pumps. Upgrading from an old 8 or 10 SEER unit to a modern 16+ SEER2 system can cut cooling costs by 30-40% against Toledo Edison's 14-cent per kWh rate. The Inflation Reduction Act's HEEHRA rebates, with an $8,000 cap, can significantly offset the upfront cost, making high-efficiency upgrades financially practical.

Should I consider switching from my natural gas furnace to a heat pump?

For Fayette homes, a dual-fuel system pairing a heat pump with a gas furnace is often optimal. The heat pump handles efficient heating down to about 20-30°F and all summer cooling, while the furnace takes over during colder snaps below that point. This setup leverages the heat pump during off-peak hours and avoids high-cost electric resistance heating during Toledo Edison's 2 PM to 7 PM peak rate period in winter.

How old is the average HVAC system in Fayette, and why does that matter for reliability?

The average home in Fayette was built in 1967, making the typical original or replacement system around 59 years old. Units of this vintage often have aging galvanized sheet metal ductwork and refrigerant lines that develop small leaks. This age is a primary reason we see condensate line freezing as a common failure point; low refrigerant charge from minor leaks reduces suction line temperature, causing the condensate to freeze and block the drain.

Why does my air conditioner struggle on the hottest days here?

HVAC systems are sized for a specific design temperature, which for Fayette is 87°F. On days that exceed this, which is common during heat waves, the system runs continuously to try and maintain a temperature gap it was not engineered to handle. Modern units using R-454B refrigerant maintain better capacity and efficiency at these higher outdoor temperatures compared to older R-22 systems.

My air conditioner just stopped on a hot day in Downtown Fayette. How fast can a technician get here?

A dispatch from our service center near Fayette Village Park can typically reach any Downtown Fayette address within 5 to 10 minutes via US-20. For a no-cool call, we prioritize diagnosing a tripped breaker, a dirty air filter, or a frozen indoor coil first. This rapid local response is crucial to prevent secondary damage from condensate overflow during the humid summer months.

Can my older home's duct system handle better air filters for ozone and pollen?

Fayette's humid continental climate brings a May pollen peak and summer ozone risk, making filtration important. Your existing galvanized sheet metal ducts are typically robust, but adding a high-MERV filter requires a static pressure check. A MERV-13 filter can capture fine particulates and pollen, but it may overwhelm the blower in a 1960s-era system if the ductwork has restrictions or is undersized.

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