Serving Tekoa and Whitman County
Most HVAC calls we get from Tekoa homeowners follow a predictable seasonal pattern. Furnace calls spike in October and November as the first cold snaps hit and systems that haven't run since spring face their first real test. AC calls peak in late June and July when a heat run reveals problems that weren't visible in May. The homeowners who get ahead of those windows — scheduling furnace service in September and AC service in April — spend less per year on their HVAC systems than the ones who wait for something to break.
Whitman 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 Tekoa is measurable over 3 to 5 years without protective maintenance.
Tekoa sees approximately 860 cooling degree days in summer and 6,780 heating degree days in winter, with real seasonal demand on both systems. Whitman County homes built around 1976 — the local median — are at the age where original HVAC equipment is entering the replacement planning window.