Your Jackson Heating and Cooling Experts
If your Jackson home has an AC system installed before 2010, there's a meaningful chance it still uses R-22 refrigerant — a product that is no longer manufactured in the US and is available only from dwindling reclaimed supplies at significantly elevated cost. A refrigerant recharge on an R-22 system that has a leak now costs three to five times more per pound than R-410A — and the leak will return if it isn't repaired. For most Aiken County homeowners with aging R-22 systems, the economics of repair versus replacement have already crossed the threshold.
Aiken County's hot, humid summers keep AC systems running for 7 to 9 months of the year. High dew points accelerate biological growth in drain pans and evaporator coils — condensate drain flushing and coil cleaning aren't optional in Jackson, they're how systems stay functional through the full cooling season.
Jackson averages approximately 2,450 cooling degree days annually and sees around 83 days above 90°F each summer. The median home in Aiken County was built around 1977, meaning a substantial share of local air conditioning systems are approaching or past their typical 12 to 18 year service life.