July 8, 2024. Salt Lake County hit 102°F that Monday afternoon — one of the hottest days of an already brutal summer. We took 47 emergency AC calls between 11:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. that day, the highest single-day call volume in our company history. One of those calls came from a customer in Federal Heights whose Trane XV20 had been running constantly since 7:00 a.m. but couldn’t hold setpoint below 79°F. Eli Tran arrived at 4:47 p.m. (we were running 4-5 hour response times during the peak). Diagnostic took 18 minutes: condenser coil was so packed with cottonwood seeds, dryer lint, and Wasatch dust accumulated over the previous 8 weeks that airflow through it was probably 30% of design. Indoor temperature was climbing despite the AC running because the compressor couldn’t reject heat properly. Coil cleaning on-site — chemical cleaner, garden hose flush, fin straightening on bent fins — took 35 minutes. Within 90 minutes of coil cleaning, indoor temperature dropped from 78°F to 73°F. Total invoice: $245. No parts replaced. The AC was completely fine; the airflow obstruction was the entire problem. This is the most common AC repair scenario across Salt Lake City — equipment that’s “broken” actually just needs the maintenance it never received. Below is what AC repair in Salt Lake City actually involves, the most common failure modes, our pricing by repair category, and what we do across the city’s 20+ neighborhoods. For broader AC repair technical context see the main AC repair page.
Same-day service capability across all Salt Lake City neighborhoods during shoulder seasons. Peak summer (July-August) may have extended response times due to high demand.