Fast, Reliable Duct Repair & Sealing Across Coram
Coram homeowners deal with a particle load most Long Island towns never see. Duct repair and sealing in Coram, NY typically runs $280–$650 for standard jobs and is usually completed same-day when you call (833) 364-5125 before noon. We’re familiar with the 11727 zip code and the neighborhoods along Middle Country Road, the ranch homes near Hawkins Path, and the cape cods tucked behind Route 112 — we know the duct systems in these houses because we’ve worked on them.
Our crew reaches Coram from Bridgeport with a fully stocked van carrying mastic sealant, metal repair sleeves, and flex-duct replacement sections. Ryan Bell leads every job personally. After 11 years focused exclusively on duct systems, we’ve encountered the specific failure modes that Coram’s 1960s–1980s housing stock and its unique Pine Barrens exposure create.
Why Redwood Air Duct Cleaning Service Bridgeport Is Coram’s Preferred Duct Repair & Sealing Company
Nearly 1,100 homeowners have reviewed us, and that 4.9-star average represents real jobs finished and real follow-ups handled. Coram customers specifically mention the difference between our work and generalist HVAC crews who treat ducts as an afterthought. We’re not routing you to a subcontractor — Ryan leads every job personally, so the person quoting your repair is the person sealing your seams.
Our response time to Coram averages same-day or next-morning when you call early. We know the local traffic patterns on Middle Country Road and Route 25, and we schedule to avoid the worst of it. That matters when your flex duct has torn and your system is pulling crawlspace air into your living room.
We’ve developed specific protocols for Coram’s conditions. The yellowish resinous dust our crew finds in return plenums near the Pine Barrens border? We’ve seen it dozens of times. We know which sealants hold up against that particulate profile and which insulation R-values prevent the condensation that leads to mold in Coram’s humid July and August.
Our Duct Repair & Sealing Services in Coram
Duct Sealing with Mastic Sealant
Mastic sealant is our primary weapon against the infiltration that plagues Coram homes. That dried-out duct tape holding your 1970s sheet-metal joints together? It fails under Pine Barrens pollen load, creating gaps that bypass your filter entirely. We brush on water-based mastic — it remains flexible for decades, bonds to metal and flex duct alike, and creates an airtight seal that stops particulate intrusion at the source. For Coram homes near the Barrens core, we often apply two coats to seams that face the highest pressure differential. Typical mastic sealing for a full Coram system runs $280–$450.
Metal Duct Repair
Coram’s ranch and cape-cod stock from the Brookhaven Township boom came with galvanized sheet-metal ductwork that’s now 40–60 years old. We’ve replaced rusted sections near Hawkins Path, patched corroded return plenums off Route 112, and reseparated joints that original installers fastened with screws and hope. Metal duct repair in Coram costs $180–$340 per section depending on accessibility and extent of corrosion. When the metal is too far gone — we’ve seen ductwork in Middle Country Road corridor homes that’s paper-thin from decades of condensation — we’ll tell you straight and quote replacement rather than throw good money at a failing system.
Flex Duct Repair
Those flex-duct additions from 1980s HVAC upgrades? They’re sagging now, torn at connection points, pulling sandy soil and ash from crawlspaces during dry-season brush fires. We replace deteriorated flex runs with properly supported, insulated flex duct rated for the temperature swings Coram attics see. A single flex-duct replacement typically runs $220–$380; multiple runs in the same system bring per-run costs down. We support every run with proper straps to prevent the sagging that caused the original failure.
Duct Insulation
Bare metal ductwork in Coram’s humid summers is a mold incubator. When cool supply air hits 85-degree attic air, condensation forms on uninsulated metal. Add a leak that depressurizes the system, and that moisture gets pulled into your supply runs along with spores. We wrap repaired metal duct with fiberglass insulation faced with vapor barrier, sealed at every seam. For Coram’s climate, we typically specify R-6 minimum in attics and R-8 where space allows. Duct insulation for a full system runs $320–$580 depending on linear footage and access difficulty.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in Coram
We carry professional-grade equipment that commercial contractors trust for the same problems residential systems face. Our Rotobrush and Nikro systems handle pre-sealing cleaning — we don’t seal over contamination, we remove it first. For filtration and air quality components tied to your duct system, we work with Honeywell and Aprilaire equipment, and our containment protocols meet Abatement Technologies standards. We stock repair sleeves, mastic, and insulation materials in our Coram-bound van, so most jobs don’t wait on parts. That matters when you’re dealing with a system pulling Pine Barrens particulate through a torn flex duct in peak pollen season.
Common Duct Repair & Sealing Problems We See in Coram Homes
- Dried duct tape failing under pollen load. The original tape on your 1970s sheet-metal joints has hardened and cracked. Pine Barrens pollen — especially that sticky pitch-pine particulate — finds every gap and bypasses your filter entirely. We remove the old tape and seal with mastic that flexes for decades.
- Sagging flex-duct additions pulling in crawlspace contaminants. Those 1980s flex runs weren’t properly supported. They’ve sagged onto attic insulation or torn at the plenum connection. During dry-season brush fires in the Barrens, smoke and ash enter through these gaps. We replace and properly support every run.
- Corroded metal seams hosting mold in humid summers. Coram’s July humidity hits bare metal hard. Add a leak that depressurizes the system, and mold spreads through supply runs into every room. We patch or replace corroded sections, then insulate to prevent condensation recurrence.
- Uninsulated return plenums collecting resinous pollen dust. That yellowish dust our crew finds near the Barrens border? It sticks to bare metal, absorbs moisture, and creates a substrate for microbial growth. We clean, seal, and insulate to break that cycle.
Pricing for Duct Repair & Sealing in Coram, NY
Here’s what Coram homeowners actually pay:
| Service | Typical Range in Coram |
|---|---|
| Mastic sealant (full system) | $280–$450 |
| Metal duct repair (per section) | $180–$340 |
| Flex duct replacement (per run) | $220–$380 |
| Duct insulation (full system) | $320–$580 |
| Air leak detection and spot sealing | $150–$280 |
Factors that move you within these ranges: accessibility (crawlspace vs. basement), extent of contamination requiring pre-sealing cleaning, and whether we’re working around your schedule or responding to an active failure. We don’t quote over the phone for complex jobs — we need to see your system. Estimates are free. Call (833) 364-5125 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Coram
Our service radius covers the full Brookhaven Township area. We regularly work in Selden, Port Jefferson Station, Terryville, and Middle Island — each with its own duct characteristics, though none face the Pine Barrens particulate load that defines Coram’s repair needs. Our Duct Repair & Sealing team coordinates routes to minimize wait times across the full service area.
Serving Coram, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Coram 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 — Duct Repair & Sealing in Coram
Most 1960s metal ductwork in Coram can be repaired if the metal itself hasn’t corroded through. We evaluate wall thickness at the worst sections — typically the return plenum and first few feet of supply trunk where condensation pools. If the metal is still structurally sound, we patch seams, replace damaged sections, and seal with mastic. Replacement becomes necessary when corrosion has thinned the metal to the point that screws won’t hold or structural integrity is compromised. Call (833) 364-5125 and Ryan will assess your specific system — estimates are free.
No, that yellow dust is pitch-pine pollen infiltrating through leaks in your duct system, and it’s a clear signal that your ducts need sealing. That resinous particulate is unique to the Pine Barrens corridor and doesn’t appear in neighboring Selden or Lake Grove. It bypasses standard filters through gaps in duct seams, sticks to bare metal, and creates a substrate for microbial growth. We identify the entry points, seal them with mastic, and clean existing contamination before it becomes a mold vector.
Coram homeowners should schedule duct inspection every 2–3 years — more frequently if you live within a mile of the Pine Barrens core or have noticed that yellow pollen dust. The particulate load here is fundamentally higher than in fully developed Long Island towns, meaning leaks create problems faster. After any significant brush fire in the Barrens, inspect within the season if you smell smoke or see ash residue at vents. We offer inspection-only visits at $120–$180 that apply toward repair if you proceed.
Yes — we clean with Rotobrush systems before any sealing work. Sealing over contamination traps particulate inside your system, creating a long-term air quality problem. Our Rotobrush agitation loosens Pine Barrens pollen, dust, and organic buildup; Nikro HEPA vacuums capture it at the source. Only after verified cleaning do we apply mastic sealant. This sequence matters for Coram’s particulate profile more than for typical suburban ductwork.
Yes — proper duct insulation is one of the most effective mold prevention measures for Coram’s climate. Uninsulated metal ductwork in 85-degree attic air creates condensation when 55-degree supply air flows through. That moisture, combined with any leak that depressurizes the system, pulls mold spores into supply runs. Insulation with intact vapor barrier eliminates the condensation surface. We typically see mold recurrence drop to near-zero after proper insulation in Coram homes. Call (833) 364-5125 for a free assessment of your system’s insulation status.
Written by Ryan Bell, Owner at Redwood Air Duct Cleaning, serving Coram and surrounding Long Island communities since 2013.