Your Womens Bay Heating and Cooling Experts
Womens Bay has a significant inventory of housing built before 1980, and a lot of that housing still has the original or once-replaced HVAC equipment. A furnace that's 18 to 22 years old in Kodiak Island County has been through hundreds of heating cycles in some of the more demanding winters in the country. It may still be running, but the heat exchanger fatigue, the inducer motor wear, and the control board age all represent failure risk that increases with every season. Knowing where your system actually stands — not just whether it's running today — changes how you plan.
Womens Bay's winters demand more from heating systems than almost any other US market. Inducer motor wear, cracked heat exchangers, and ignition failures are more common in Kodiak Island County than in mixed-climate regions — not because the equipment is worse, but because it runs harder and longer every season.
With around 9,000 annual heating degree days, Womens Bay's heating season imposes sustained demand on furnace systems across Kodiak Island County. Homes with a median construction year of 1984 have a meaningful share of heating equipment that has accumulated 15 or more years of heating season use.