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Wright HVAC Company

Wright HVAC Company

Wright, WY
Emergency HVAC Services

Phone : (888) 996-4787

Wright HVAC Company offers HVAC repair and maintenance in Wright, Wyoming. The company works with common furnace and AC systems and provides clear recommendations without pressure.
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Q&A

Why does my AC struggle when it's over 95 degrees outside?

Wright's HVAC systems are engineered for a 88°F design temperature, balancing cost and performance for typical summer conditions. During regional heatwaves that exceed this limit, any system's capacity drops. The newer R-454B refrigerant standard helps by maintaining better pressure and efficiency at these higher ambient temperatures compared to older R-410A, but it cannot overcome a system that is undersized for the extreme load.

My Ecobee thermostat is showing an E1 error. What's happening?

An Ecobee E1 alert indicates the thermostat is not detecting voltage from the equipment, often signaling a safety lockout. In Wright, this commonly points to a high-pressure switch tripping due to a dirty condenser coil from windborne dust or a refrigerant overcharge. It can also follow a frozen evaporator coil event from restricted airflow. This specific code is a protective shutdown, preventing compressor damage until a technician diagnoses the root pressure issue.

Can my existing ducts handle a better air filter for wildfire smoke?

While a MERV-13 filter is excellent for capturing wildfire PM2.5 and June pollen, it creates more airflow resistance. Your home's galvanized sheet metal ducts, if still sealed and intact, often have the rigidity to handle it, but the aged furnace blower may not. Installing a high-efficiency filter without checking the system's static pressure can replicate the very conditions that cause coils to freeze, negating any air quality benefit.

I use expensive propane. Should I switch to a heat pump?

For Wright's climate, a cold-climate heat pump is a viable primary heat source. The technology now maintains efficiency down to near 0°F, overlapping with the region's winter lows. Pairing it with your existing propane furnace as a backup creates a highly efficient dual-fuel system. To maximize savings, program the heat pump to reduce use during PRECorp's 4 PM to 8 PM peak rate hours, letting the propane system take brief, cost-effective intervals of supplemental heat.

My AC just quit on a hot day. How fast can someone get here?

A complete loss of cooling requires immediate diagnosis to prevent further component stress. From our dispatch point near the Wright Centennial Museum, we route technicians via WY-387 for direct access to Wright Town Center. This logistics plan ensures a service vehicle is typically at your address within 5 to 10 minutes of your call to begin troubleshooting the compressor, capacitor, or refrigerant charge.

What are the rules for installing a new A2L refrigerant system?

All installations using mildy flammable A2L refrigerants like R-454B must follow 2026 UL 60335-2-40 safety standards, requiring leak detectors and updated electrical classifications. In Campbell County, the Planning and Zoning Office mandates a permit for any refrigerant circuit change or new equipment installation. Their inspection verifies the system meets these updated codes for charge limits, airflow, and detector placement, which are critical for safe operation in your home.

My system is as old as the house. Should I expect trouble?

Homes built around 1984 often still have their original HVAC equipment, making the system about 42 years old. In Wright's arid climate, galvanized sheet metal ductwork from that era typically develops small leaks and internal corrosion. This increases static pressure, which forces the evaporator coil to work harder. That high static pressure is the primary reason older systems here experience frozen evaporator coils, as the restricted airflow prevents proper heat absorption.

Is the new 13.4 SEER2 standard worth the upgrade cost?

The 13.4 SEER2 minimum for 2026 represents a significant jump in real-world efficiency over older units. At Powder River Energy's rate of $0.11 per kWh, a modern system can cut seasonal cooling costs by 20-30%. The federal Inflation Reduction Act rebate, active with an $8,000 cap, directly offsets the higher upfront cost of qualifying high-SEER2 equipment, making the upgrade financially practical.

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