Your Pelican Bay Heating and Cooling Experts
The most common contributor to premature HVAC failure that we see in Pelican Bay homes is a clogged air filter. It doesn't seem like much — a dirty filter — but restricted airflow forces the blower motor to work harder, reduces heat transfer across the heat exchanger, and causes the high-limit switch to trip on furnaces or the evaporator coil to freeze on AC systems. A $10 filter changed every 60-90 days prevents a disproportionate share of the repair calls we handle in Collier County. It's not complicated, but it's genuinely important.
In Pelican Bay, air conditioning isn't seasonal — it's infrastructure. Collier County's climate means cooling systems run from spring through fall under conditions that simultaneously stress refrigerant circuits, blower motors, and drain systems. A system that made it through last summer isn't guaranteed to make it through the next without attention.
Pelican Bay's extended cooling season generates approximately 3,410 cooling degree days of annual energy demand. Homes built around 1989 — the median construction year in Collier County — are at the age where original air conditioning equipment has either been replaced once or is overdue for evaluation.