Pressure testing before sealing quantifies total leakage. Every leak point located and sealed with correct materials. Post-sealing pressure test documents the improvement. Every service guaranteed.
Your energy bills are higher than they should be for the amount of heating and cooling your home requires in Oregon. Certain rooms will not reach the right temperature regardless of how long the HVAC runs in Oregon, OH. You have had the equipment checked and it is working correctly in Oregon. If the equipment is fine but the home is not comfortable and the bills are high, the problem is almost certainly in the distribution system in Oregon, OH. Specifically, in duct leaks that are allowing conditioned air to escape into unconditioned attic or crawl space before it reaches the rooms you are paying to heat and cool in Oregon.
Duct leakage happens at every unsealed joint between duct sections, at every branch takeoff from the trunk line, at every register boot connection in the walls and ceilings, and at the connections where the duct system meets the air handler in Oregon, OH. The Department of Energy estimates that typical residential duct systems lose 20 to 30 percent of conditioned air through leakage in Oregon. For a home spending $200 per month on heating and cooling, that is $40 to $60 per month escaping through duct leaks to the attic or crawl space in Oregon, OH.
MBM Air Duct Cleaning finds and seals duct leaks throughout Oregon, OH in Oregon. Pressure testing before sealing to quantify the total leakage in Oregon, OH. Systematic identification of every specific leak point through the accessible system in Oregon. Correct sealant materials applied to every leak point in Oregon, OH. Post-sealing pressure testing to document the improvement with measured numbers in Oregon. And a guarantee on every sealing service in Oregon, OH. Call now for same-day scheduling in Oregon.
Standard duct tape uses a rubber-based adhesive that performs at room temperature but dries and loses adhesion when repeatedly exposed to the temperature extremes that duct systems experience during HVAC operation in Oregon. A supply duct carrying cold conditioned air through a 130-degree summer attic cycles through extreme temperatures with every cooling cycle in Oregon, OH. Standard duct tape adhesive is not formulated for this cycling and fails within a few seasons in Oregon. Mastic sealant remains flexible after curing and maintains its seal through years of thermal cycling in Oregon, OH. UL 181-rated foil tape maintains adhesion for 20 years or more in normal duct system conditions in Oregon.
Every connection between duct sections is a potential leak point in Oregon, OH. In most residential installations, these joints were mechanically fastened without sealant during installation in Oregon. Over years of thermal cycling that expands and contracts the ductwork with every HVAC cycle, even joints that were initially sealed with standard duct tape have failed as the tape dried and lost adhesion in Oregon, OH.
Branch takeoffs split conditioned air from the main trunk line into the individual branch runs serving each room in Oregon. They have multiple edges and angles that create significant potential leak area if not correctly sealed in Oregon, OH. Branch takeoff leaks are among the largest individual leak points in typical residential duct systems in Oregon.
The register boot connects the branch duct run to the wall, ceiling, or floor opening where the supply register mounts in Oregon, OH. The connection between the flexible duct and the boot collar and the connection between the boot and the surrounding framing are both common significant leak points in Oregon. Conditioned air escaping at the boot level leaks into the wall or ceiling cavity rather than through the register into the room in Oregon, OH.
Systems sealed with standard duct tape develop leakage as the tape dries, cracks, and loses adhesion from temperature cycling in Oregon. Standard duct tape on duct joints typically fails within three to five seasons of thermal cycling in Oregon, OH. Joints that were sealed with standard tape appear sealed when first applied and are open to leakage again within a few years in Oregon.
Supply duct leakage between the trunk line and the registers means rooms furthest from the air handler receive less conditioned air than they were designed to receive in Oregon. The conditioned air that leaks out before reaching the register does not reach the room in Oregon, OH. Rooms at the end of long duct runs with multiple leak points along the way receive the cumulative effect of all those leaks in Oregon. The room that is always too hot in summer and too cold in winter is often at the end of a duct run with multiple unsealed joints in Oregon, OH.
Return duct leaks draw air from the surrounding unconditioned space into the return airstream in Oregon. A return duct leak in an attic draws hot, dusty attic air into the air handler in summer in Oregon, OH. A return duct leak in a crawl space draws crawl space air including moisture, mold spores, and soil particulate into the system in Oregon. This unconditioned air bypasses the filter and is distributed throughout the home in Oregon, OH.
MBM Air Duct Cleaning performs a duct pressure test before any sealing begins in Oregon, OH. A calibrated fan is connected to the duct system and pressurized to a standard test pressure in Oregon. The measured airflow represents the total leakage rate and provides the baseline for comparing with the post-sealing result in Oregon, OH.
With the system pressurized, MBM technicians work through the accessible duct system to locate every specific leak point in Oregon. Every branch takeoff. Every duct joint. Every register boot connection. Every plenum seam and air handler connection in Oregon, OH. Every identified leak point is marked for sealing in Oregon.
Mastic sealant for most duct joint and connection applications in Oregon, OH. UL 181-rated foil tape for specific sheet metal seam applications in Oregon. The correct material for the specific application in Oregon, OH.
MBM systematically seals every identified leak point in the accessible duct system in Oregon. Mastic applied at the correct thickness to cover the full joint gap and bond to the duct surfaces on both sides in Oregon, OH. Every identified leak point addressed before the post-sealing pressure test in Oregon.
After all identified leak points are sealed, MBM repeats the pressure test to measure the post-sealing leakage rate in Oregon, OH. The before and after measurements quantify the leakage reduction achieved by the sealing in Oregon. Documented evidence of the result provided to the homeowner in Oregon, OH.
Mastic is a water-based sealant specifically formulated for duct system applications in Oregon, OH. It remains flexible after curing, maintaining its seal through the thermal cycling that duct systems experience in Oregon. It does not dry out, crack, or lose adhesion from temperature cycling the way standard duct tape does in Oregon, OH.
UL 181-rated foil tape is tested and rated specifically for HVAC duct applications in Oregon. Unlike standard duct tape, it maintains its adhesion through the temperature cycling of duct system operation in Oregon, OH. Appropriate for specific sheet metal seam applications in Oregon.
Standard silver duct tape is not rated for duct system applications in Oregon, OH. Its rubber-based adhesive dries and loses adhesion from temperature cycling in Oregon. MBM Air Duct Cleaning never uses standard duct tape for duct sealing work in Oregon, OH.
MBM performs pressure testing before and after every duct sealing service in Oregon, OH. The before and after measurements document the leakage reduction achieved in Oregon. Documented improvement, not assumed improvement in Oregon, OH.
MBM seals every identified leak point in the accessible duct system in Oregon. Not a representative sample. Not the most obvious points only in Oregon, OH. Every identified leak point in Oregon.
Mastic sealant and UL 181-rated foil tape that maintain their effectiveness through the thermal cycling of long-term HVAC operation in Oregon, OH. Never standard duct tape in Oregon.
Every MBM Air Duct Cleaning duct sealing service is guaranteed in Oregon. If the sealing does not produce the expected improvement within the guarantee period, we return and address it at no additional charge in Oregon, OH.
All pricing confirmed upfront before work begins in Oregon. No surprises in Oregon, OH.
A sealing service that reduces leakage by 15 to 20 percentage points returns that proportional energy cost reduction on every subsequent energy bill in Oregon, OH. For a home spending $200 per month on heating and cooling, a 15 percent leakage reduction saves approximately $30 per month in Oregon. A sealing service costing $500 to $1,000 pays for itself in energy savings within 18 to 36 months in most cases in Oregon, OH. Every month after payback is net return on the investment in Oregon.
Call now for same-day scheduling in Oregon.
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Duct leakage pays for conditioned air that heats and cools your attic and crawl space instead of your living spaces every month in Oregon. MBM Air Duct Cleaning quantifies the leakage with pressure testing, locates every specific leak point, seals every accessible leak with correct materials, confirms the improvement with post-sealing testing, and guarantees every service in Oregon, OH. Call now for same-day scheduling in Oregon.
Call Now — (888) 216-9551