Your Mountain View Heating and Cooling Experts
Most Mountain View homeowners focus on the furnace or AC unit when performance drops — but the duct system delivering conditioned air to living spaces is responsible for a significant share of HVAC inefficiency. The US Department of Energy estimates that 20 to 30 percent of conditioned air in a typical home is lost through duct leakage before it reaches the rooms it's meant to serve. In Santa Clara County, where heating or cooling loads are real, that leakage translates directly to higher utility bills and rooms that never reach the thermostat setpoint.
Santa Clara County's marine climate creates HVAC conditions that are mild in temperature but persistent in humidity and, for coastal installations, corrosive from salt air exposure. Condenser coil degradation in Mountain View is measurable over 3 to 5 years without protective maintenance.
Mountain View sees approximately 410 cooling degree days in summer and 6,680 heating degree days in winter, with real seasonal demand on both systems. Santa Clara County homes built around 1968 — the local median — are at the age where original HVAC equipment is entering the replacement planning window.