Your Moapa Valley Heating and Cooling Experts
The most common contributor to premature HVAC failure that we see in Moapa Valley 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 Clark County. It's not complicated, but it's genuinely important.
Desert heat in Clark County puts AC systems under some of the highest sustained loads in the country. Equipment that's undersized, poorly charged, or running with dirty coils fails under extreme ambient temperatures faster than anywhere else in the US.
Moapa Valley averages approximately 3,410 cooling degree days annually and sees around 90 days above 90°F each summer. The median home in Clark County was built around 1996, meaning a substantial share of local air conditioning systems are approaching or past their typical 12 to 18 year service life.