If your Erie home is facing air-quality issues, you may be suffering anything from minor discomfort to significant allergy or health problems. Our team at Carbon Valley Heating and Air wants to help keep your home’s indoor air quality high and you and your family healthy and comfortable.
In 2023, Carbon Valley residents used their heating and cooling systems a lot. In fact, according to the National Weather Service, we had 330 days with temperature lows below 60° and 96 days with temperature highs over 80° F.
If you are in the market for a new heat pump, efficiency is probably a key factor in your search. The Air Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute (AHRI) has a universal ranking system for heating and cooling units that serves to help.
Carbon Valley Heating & Air is proud to be a Carrier dealer in Colorado. Recently our team won 3 prestigious awards at the Carrier Dealer meeting.
Even though our Carbon Valley Heating & Air, heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) experts are always here for you, as a Erie homeowner, you should know at least a little something about your heating and cooling system. Knowledge is power after all.
At Carbon Valley Heating and Air, we always want to answer the 5 W’s: Who, What, Where, When, and Why!
You turn on your furnace, and you smell gas. What should you do? First assess what the smell most likely is, and you may not need to call anyone. Of course, if you’re still nervous because you just don’t know, turn off your furnace and give one of our highly trained technicians a call at 303-963-9321 to come out to diagnose the smell for you.
Mini split systems can be used for alleviating a hot or cold spot, helping heat and cool a renovation or new construction, and even providing comfort for light commercial use.
One of the benefits of having a geothermal system for your Firestone home is the minimal maintenance it requires.
A heat pump is a device that transfers heat from one place to another, from inside your home to outside or from outside to inside. In the winter a heat pump works like a heater, extracting heat energy from outside and transferring it inside. In the summer the process reverses and it will remove heat from your home and transfer it outside similar to an air conditioner.