Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Huntington Station, CT | Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport
Carrier air duct cleaning in Huntington Station typically runs $280–$520 for a full system, and most jobs we book here are completed same-day. We’re an independent Carrier service provider—not manufacturer-authorized—so we work on every era of Carrier equipment with OEM-compatible parts and no corporate repair mandates. For a free estimate on your Huntington Station home, call us at (833) 364-5125.
Why Huntington Station Residents Choose Us for Carrier Service
We’ve cleaned more than 200 Carrier duct systems in Huntington Station over the past eleven years, and that repetition matters. Ryan Bell, our owner and lead technician, grew up in Bridgeport’s Black Rock neighborhood and cut his teeth on the same post-war housing stock you’ll find throughout the 11746 ZIP code—Cape Cods and ranches with galvanized ductwork that hasn’t seen a brush since the Eisenhower administration. He learned the mechanical fundamentals at Housatonic Community College before spending his early years crawling through Fairfield County attics, and that foundation shows in how we approach Carrier equipment here.
We don’t send salespeople. Ryan leads every job personally, operating Rotobrush and Nikro systems—the same equipment commercial contractors use on institutional jobs. Nearly 1,100 homeowners have reviewed us at 4.9 stars, which tells you something about consistency in a trade where most competitors have a few dozen reviews and rotating crews. When we quote a Carrier cleaning in Huntington Station, we’re quoting from direct observation, not a flat-rate menu.
Common Carrier Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Huntington Station
- Rusted plenums on original 1960s Carrier BDP gas furnaces. The coastal humidity rolling in from Huntington Harbor and the Long Island Sound hits sheet-metal plenums harder than inland Suffolk County. We find pinprick rust holes that leak combustion debris and attic air directly into supply ducts—something you won’t catch without a video inspection.
- Delaminated flex-duct connections at Carrier air handlers. Salt-laden Sound air degrades the vinyl jacket on flex-duct connections faster than dry inland climates. Gaps form between the collar and the trunk, pulling attic insulation into the airstream and loading up your filter every three weeks.
- Evaporator coil blockages on Carrier split-levels with stud-bay returns. In the 1950s and 1960s ranches along New York Avenue and Gerard Street, builders framed return-air chases directly into wall cavities. Decades of mouse nesting material, fiberglass dust, and construction debris accumulate on Carrier evaporator coils, choking airflow and forcing compressor short-cycling.
- Premature ECM blower motor failure in Carrier Infinity series. The Infinity 98’s variable-speed motor is precision-balanced. When unlined return chases feed it a steady diet of debris, the blower wheel goes out of balance. We’ve replaced motors that failed at 6–8 years instead of their 15–20 year design life.
- Condensation-driven mold in shoulder-season humidity. April through May and September through October, Huntington Station’s humidity spikes while homeowners are neither heating nor cooling aggressively. Carrier ducts that haven’t been cleaned harbor spore colonies that activate during these wet-dry transitions.
Carrier Service in Huntington Station: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
In Huntington Station’s post-war Capes and ranches, the central return “duct” is frequently an open stud-bay chase running through an interior wall or subfloor—these unlined cavities pull attic insulation fibers, mouse nesting material, and decades of construction dust directly into the Carrier air handler, a condition nearly nonexistent in homes with fully enclosed metal returns. This isn’t a design flaw you can blame on Carrier; it’s a construction shortcut typical of Long Island’s 1945–1970 building boom, and it fundamentally changes how we clean these systems.
On a Carrier Performance 96 in a 1956 Cape on Gerard Street, our video inspection revealed a stud-bay return chase packed solid with cellulose insulation and mouse droppings from an open attic connection. We deployed a HEPA rotary brush and shop-vac combination, extracting 14 pounds of debris and restoring airflow from 680 CFM to 985 CFM. The homeowner confirmed the musty odor that had plagued them for years was gone. That job took four hours. A generic duct cleaner with a portable vacuum would have left 80% of the problem intact.
We see this chase configuration less than ten miles inland. Huntington Station’s specific building era and coastal position create a double burden: the construction method was cheap and common, and the humidity accelerates everything that grows in the debris.
Carrier Models & Products We Service in Huntington Station
We work on Carrier equipment from the 1960s through current production. The three model families we encounter most in Huntington Station’s housing stock:
- Carrier Comfort 92 — Single-stage, found in 1980s–2000s ranches. OEM parts are increasingly discontinued; we source high-quality aftermarket blower motors and heat exchanger components, and we’ll tell you straight when repair exceeds 50% of replacement cost.
- Carrier Performance 96 — Two-stage, common in 1990s–2010s renovations. We stock OEM blower motors and control boards for fast turnaround on the 11746 side of Huntington.
- Carrier Infinity 98 — Modulating, premium efficiency. We use OEM parts exclusively to protect the variable-speed ECM motor and Greenspeed intelligence; aftermarket substitutes cost you efficiency ratings and warranty coverage.
Our supply duct cleaning, return duct cleaning, and video inspection services apply across all three lines. We carry Honeywell filtration components and Aprilaire humidifier pads when your Carrier system needs ancillary work during the cleaning visit.
Carrier Service Pricing in Huntington Station
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Standard air duct cleaning (supply + return, up to 12 vents) | $280 – $420 |
| Air duct cleaning with video inspection | $340 – $480 |
| Return chase remediation (stud-bay cleaning + sealing) | $180 – $320 |
| Evaporator coil cleaning (accessible, in-place) | $150 – $260 |
| Full system: ducts + coil + dryer vent | $420 – $520 |
What drives cost? Accessibility of your Carrier air handler, whether we’re dealing with enclosed metal ducts or open stud-bay chases, and how many years of accumulation we’re removing. A 1962 Cape with original galvanized trunk lines and a stud-bay return takes longer than a 1995 ranch with flex duct. Our free estimate includes a video walkthrough of your system—no charge, no obligation. Call (833) 364-5125 to schedule; we typically book Huntington Station same-day or next-day.
Serving Huntington Station, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Huntington Station 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 — Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Huntington Station
No—when done correctly, rotary brush cleaning is gentler on galvanized steel than the airflow erosion it’s already endured for 60-plus years. We adjust brush tension for light-gauge 1950s metal and pre-inspect for existing rust-through. If we find pinhole leaks at the plenum, we’ll show you before we proceed. Call (833) 364-5125 for a free video inspection.
We treat them as unlined ductwork, which they functionally are. Our approach: HEPA-contained rotary brushing from both the grille end and the air handler end, followed by sealant application to the framing cavity where accessible. In some cases we recommend retrofitting with flex duct or metal liner if the chase has open attic connections. This is a Huntington Station-specific protocol we’ve refined over dozens of jobs.
It often helps significantly, but it’s not automatic. Weak second-floor airflow in split-levels and Capes usually has multiple causes: coil blockage, blower wheel debris, and undersized or crushed supply runs. We video-inspect all three before quoting. If the coil is clean and airflow remains restricted, we’ll show you the duct damage rather than sell you a cleaning you don’t need. I’d rather explain it once on the job than have you call back wondering what you paid for.
Partially. The salt-laden coastal air in Huntington Station accelerates surface oxidation, but orange flaking rust typically indicates condensate leakage from a cracked collector box or failed inducer gasket—both common on Carrier BDP furnaces after 30+ years. We inspect for active leaks during our cleaning; if the plenum is rusted through, we’ll document it and discuss whether repair or replacement makes sense for your system’s age.
We warranty our workmanship for one year. OEM Carrier parts carry their own manufacturer warranties—typically 5 years for blower motors, 20 years for heat exchangers on newer models. Aftermarket parts we install on discontinued Comfort 92 systems carry a 1-year replacement guarantee. We’re insured and bonded, and our 1,097 reviews reflect how we handle the rare callback. For specifics on your Carrier model, call (833) 364-5125.
Service Areas Near Huntington Station
We run Carrier repair in Dix Hills throughout the Huntington Station 11746 area and neighboring communities including Bridgeport, Stratford, Fairfield, Trumbull, and Easton. Ryan Bell lives and works in Fairfield County, so a Huntington Station call doesn’t mean a two-hour drive from Nassau County—we’re typically 20–30 minutes out.
Book Your Carrier Service in Huntington Station Today
Call (833) 364-5125 for a free estimate on your Carrier system. We offer same-day and next-day scheduling for Huntington Station, and Ryan Bell leads every job personally. Bring us your 1960s BDP with the rusted plenum, your Infinity 98 with the stud-bay return problem, or anything in between—we’ve seen it, we’ve cleaned it, and we’ll show you exactly what we find before we start.
Written by Ryan Bell, Owner & Lead Technician at Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport, serving Huntington Station and Fairfield County since 2013.