June 14, 2024. A customer named Caroline B. in Yalecrest — whose ductless conversion and heat pump installation stories appear elsewhere on this site — called us with a specific complaint: her 2-year-old Mitsubishi P-Series heat pump system was operating but the indoor air handler was making a distinct whirring noise that hadn’t been present at installation. The system was still heating and cooling adequately, but the noise was becoming intrusive during quiet evening hours. Diagnostic confirmed: the ECM blower motor bearings were developing a wear pattern, likely from a subtle balance issue that had developed over operational use. Under Mitsubishi Diamond Contractor warranty (which we hold), the entire ECM blower motor and assembly was covered — parts and labor. Marcus Halverson ordered the replacement assembly, returned 4 days later, removed the existing motor, installed the warranty replacement, and verified operation. Caroline’s system is now silent again at no cost to her, even though the warranty would have charged $480-$840 in labor at standard rates. The case demonstrates why proper installation (Diamond Contractor status, warranty registration within 72 hours, full equipment commissioning per Mitsubishi protocol) matters in the long run. Air handlers are the workhorse of forced-air HVAC systems — they move conditioned air through the home and operate continuously during heating and cooling cycles. When they fail or degrade, the entire system performance is affected. We service the full range: installation of new air handlers paired with replacement or new equipment, component-level repair (blower motors, evaporator coils, electric heat strips, control boards, drain pans), and full air handler replacement when economic.
Air handlers come in two primary configurations in residential applications. Fan coil air handlers are used with heat pump systems (Mitsubishi P-Series, Daikin Aurora, Bosch IDS Premium 2.0, Carrier Greenspeed) where the indoor unit houses the blower, evaporator/condenser coil, and electric heat strips. Furnace-based air handlers are used in matched AC + furnace systems where the existing furnace acts as the air handler during cooling season (the AC’s evaporator coil sits on top of the furnace cabinet). This page covers fan coil air handlers primarily — if you have a furnace-based system, see the furnace installation and furnace repair pages for related service detail. For broader installation context see the installation services hub.
When both outdoor unit and indoor air handler are at end of life, full system replacement is the standard approach. See the HVAC replacement page for full system replacement scenarios and pricing.
Same-day diagnostic often available. Comfort Care plan members get priority dispatch.