Your Burton Heating and Cooling Experts
One of the most common — and costly — errors in HVAC installation in Burton is oversized equipment. A furnace or AC system that's too large for the home short-cycles: it reaches the set temperature quickly, shuts off, and restarts frequently instead of running in longer, more efficient cycles. Short-cycling reduces comfort, increases energy consumption, accelerates component wear, and reduces system lifespan. Proper equipment sizing requires a Manual J load calculation that accounts for Beaufort County's climate data, your home's insulation, window area, ceiling height, and occupancy. Contractors who size by square footage alone are guessing.
In Burton, air conditioning isn't seasonal — it's infrastructure. Beaufort 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.
Burton's extended cooling season generates approximately 3,470 cooling degree days of annual energy demand. Homes built around 1976 — the median construction year in Beaufort County — are at the age where original air conditioning equipment has either been replaced once or is overdue for evaluation.