Your Summersville Heating and Cooling Experts
Most Summersville homeowners focus on the furnace or AC unit when performance drops — but the duct system delivering conditioned air to living spaces is responsible for a significant share of HVAC inefficiency. The US Department of Energy estimates that 20 to 30 percent of conditioned air in a typical home is lost through duct leakage before it reaches the rooms it's meant to serve. In Nicholas County, where heating or cooling loads are real, that leakage translates directly to higher utility bills and rooms that never reach the thermostat setpoint.
The repeated freeze-thaw pattern in Summersville is particularly hard on outdoor AC components and furnace heat exchangers. Metal fatigue from thermal cycling is cumulative — a Nicholas County system doesn't fail all at once, it degrades through repeated stress until the weakest component gives.
With around 6,690 annual heating degree days, Summersville's heating season imposes sustained demand on furnace systems across Nicholas County. Homes with a median construction year of 1966 have a meaningful share of heating equipment that has accumulated 15 or more years of heating season use.