Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Commack, CT | Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport
Independent Lennox air duct cleaning in Commack typically runs $380–$620 for a full system, with most jobs completed in a single visit. We’re Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport—owner Ryan Bell leads every job personally, and we’ve spent 11 years focused exclusively on duct systems, including hundreds of Lennox installations across Commack’s 1960s-era housing stock, handled by our Lennox specialists. Call (833) 364-5125 for a free video inspection and exact quote.
Why Commack Residents Choose Us for Lennox Service
Ryan Bell grew up in Black Rock, cut his teeth on Fairfield County’s oldest housing stock at Housatonic Community College, and has spent eleven years running Redwood as a dedicated duct specialist—not a generalist HVAC company dabbling in ductwork on the side. When he pulls up to a Commack split-level or Cape Cod, he’s already thinking about what he’ll find: the original fiberglass-lined return plenums, the undersized supply trunks retrofitted for central air in the nineties, the moisture stains that Long Island humidity leaves behind.
We don’t send crews. Ryan leads every job personally. That matters in Commack, where the ductwork tells a specific story—one he’s read hundreds of times. Our Rotobrush and Nikro systems are the same equipment commercial contractors use on industrial jobs, and we pair them with Honeywell video inspection gear so you see what we see. Nearly 1,100 homeowners have reviewed us at 4.9 stars, but the number that matters to us is this: in Commack specifically, we’ve restored airflow on Lennox systems that were running at half capacity because nobody had looked inside the ducts since the Ford administration—including Lennox in Kings Park.
We’re independent—never authorized, never affiliated with Lennox. That means honest assessments, not warranty-scripted responses. If your ducts need cleaning, we’ll show you. If they need replacement, we’ll prove it with footage. I’d rather explain it once on the job than have you call back wondering what you paid for.
Common Lennox Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Commack
- Rust-through at Lennox supply plenum seams. Commack’s humidity—pushed inland from both the Atlantic and Long Island Sound—condenses on uninsulated sheet metal. We’ve replaced Lennox Elite Series plenums in homes near Harned Road where the bottom seam had rotted clean through, dumping conditioned air into basement joist bays.
- Fiberglass duct liner degrading into airborne particles. The 1960s tract homes dominating Commack’s 11725 ZIP used fiberglass-lined return trunks that weren’t engineered for fifty-year lifespans. In Lennox Merit Series systems, this liner breaks down into a fuzzy, respirable dust that bypasses standard filters and coats registers within weeks.
- Lennox evaporator coil biofilm from oak pollen and fungal spores. Commack’s mature tree canopy—oak especially—produces pollen loads that combine with attic humidity. On Lennox CBX air handlers with undersized returns, positive pressure forces condensation into attic spaces, creating a gelatinous biofilm that standard cleaning misses without direct coil access.
- Flex-duct sagging at joist connections. Commack’s shallow-pitch ranch roofs leave minimal attic clearance. Lennox G16 and G40 series retrofits often used flex duct draped over trusses; decades of thermal cycling sag the runs, creating low points where moisture and debris accumulate. Our video inspections catch these before they become mold reservoirs.
- Unlined stud-bay return plenums acting as debris highways. Original 1960s Commack construction routed returns through wall cavities shared with electrical and plumbing chases. No filter catches what those cavities collect. Our camera work specifically scopes these hidden shafts—something generalist cleaners rarely attempt.
Lennox Service in Commack: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Commack developed almost entirely during the 1960s–1970s Long Island suburban boom, leaving the hamlet with an unusually uniform stock of 50-to-60-year-old split-levels, ranches, and Cape Cods whose original forced-air heating ductwork was never designed for central air conditioning. When residents added AC as a retrofit—often in the 1980s and 1990s—contractors routed refrigerated air through undersized, uninsulated heating ducts not engineered to manage condensation, creating chronic moisture and debris accumulation that makes Commack duct systems far dirtier and moldier than newer construction in neighboring towns.
For Lennox owners specifically, this retrofit history creates a predictable failure pattern, as our Lennox repair in Elwood team frequently confirms. The G16 and G20 series gas furnaces installed in original construction were paired with heating-only ductwork—typically 6-inch round supplies in a trunk-and-branch layout. When CBX or CBA air handlers were added later for cooling, the same ducts had to carry 55°F air through 85°F attics in July. The temperature differential produces condensation on every uninsulated surface. Combine that with Commack’s inland-but-still-humid climate, and you’ve got the perfect environment for mold colonization inside Lennox return trunks.
We’ve scoped systems on Crooked Hill Road where the original fiberglass liner had absorbed so much moisture it weighed three times its dry mass. The Lennox blower was working overtime to push air through that saturated mess. That’s not a filter problem. That’s a duct problem that only a dedicated duct specialist with professional-grade equipment can diagnose and fix properly.
Lennox Models & Products We Service in Commack
We work on every Lennox generation commonly found in Commack’s housing stock: the Elite Series and Merit Series air handlers, the G16 / G20 / G40 gas furnace families, and the CBX / CBA series blowers and coils, offering Lennox repair in East Northport and beyond. These systems have distinct duct configurations—Elite Series units often use wider plenum connections that show stress cracks at the flange; Merit Series units in budget-conscious 1970s builds frequently have undersized return drops that starve the blower.
For repairs, we stock OEM Lennox dampers, motors, and seals. For sealing and restoration, we use aftermarket mastic and filter grilles that meet or exceed Lennox airflow specs—often faster to source and equally durable. We don’t push replacement unless the ductwork is original and failing across multiple zones. When we do recommend it, we show you the video evidence first.
Lennox Service Pricing in Commack
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Full Lennox air duct cleaning (single system) | $380 – $620 |
| Video inspection with written assessment | $85 – $150 (credited toward cleaning) |
| Duct sealing & mastic repair (per trunk line) | $180 – $340 |
| Fiberglass duct liner assessment/remediation | $420 – $780 |
| Air quality sanitizing (per system) | $140 – $220 |
What drives cost? Accessibility matters in Commack. Crawl-space returns, attic-mounted air handlers in shallow-pitch roofs, and the need for additional access doors all add time. System age matters too—original 1960s ductwork often requires more delicate handling than newer flex-duct installations. Every estimate includes a full video walkthrough, so you see exactly what you’re paying for before we start. Call (833) 364-5125 to schedule—estimates are free, and Ryan personally reviews every assessment.
Serving Commack, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Commack area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Commack
Yes, but only with controlled agitation and HEPA containment. We assess liner integrity first with video inspection; if the fiberglass is friable and shedding, cleaning alone isn’t the right fix—we’ll recommend liner encapsulation or replacement. For intact liner, our Rotobrush systems use adjustable-speed heads that clean surface debris without tearing the substrate. Call (833) 364-5125 and we’ll scope it first—no charge for the inspection.
That “black dust” is typically degraded fiberglass liner fragments mixed with carbon from the heat exchanger—common in Commack’s 1960s–70s homes where original liner has exceeded its lifespan. Surface cleaning can’t fix disintegrating substrate; the liner is actively shedding from inside the trunk. We use camera verification to confirm the source, then recommend either liner removal or full duct replacement depending on extent. For an exact diagnosis in your Commack home, call (833) 364-5125—we’ll show you the footage.
Probably not well. Original heating ducts in Commack’s Cape Cods were sized for 120°F air, not 55°F refrigerated air. The temperature drop across uninsulated metal in a humid attic produces condensation that leads to mold, rust, and biofilm. We’ve restored dozens of these retrofits by adding insulation, sealing leaks with mastic, and upgrading returns to handle the higher airflow volume central AC demands. Ryan can assess your specific layout—call (833) 364-5125 for a free evaluation.
We use OEM Lennox dampers, motors, and seals when they’re the right fit and available. For sealing work and filter upgrades, we often use aftermarket mastics and grilles that match Lennox airflow specifications—sometimes faster to source, equally durable, and more cost-effective. We’re independent, not dealer-affiliated, so our recommendations aren’t tied to any parts program. You get what actually fixes your system.
Almost certainly. Commack’s humidity penetrates crawl spaces seasonally; uninsulated return ducts in those spaces act as condensate collectors, and when the Lennox blower cycles off, stagnant moisture produces intermittent musty odors. Our video inspection targets these exact locations—we’ve found standing water in returns beneath homes near Townline Road that homeowners never knew existed. Call (833) 364-5125; we’ll pinpoint the source and give you a straight fix.
Service Areas Near Commack
We serve Commack’s 11725 ZIP directly, with regular routes through Bridgeport, Stratford, Fairfield, Trumbull, and Easton. City of Milford calls are scheduled to optimize travel time. If you’re in a bordering neighborhood and unsure whether we cover your address, call (833) 364-5125—we’ll confirm immediately.
Book Your Lennox Service in Commack Today
Commack’s 1960s-era ductwork demands a specialist who knows what to look for before opening the first access panel. Ryan Bell has spent eleven years building that expertise, and he leads every Redwood job personally. Same-day appointments are often available for Commack calls. Phone (833) 364-5125 now for your free video inspection and estimate.
Written by Ryan Bell, Owner & Lead Technician at Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport, serving Commack and Fairfield County since 2013.