Heating & Air Conditioning in Manor, TX
Brothers Heating Cooling handles residential and light-commercial heating and cooling across Manor and the surrounding area. From an AC that quit in a heat wave to a furnace that won't light on the first cold night, the fastest way to get help is to call — you'll reach a local technician, not a call center.
Furnace repair
Ignition failures, flame sensors, blower motors, and no-heat emergencies on gas and electric furnaces.
Thermostat installation
Smart and programmable thermostat wiring, setup, and configuration.
Seasonal tune-ups
Preventive maintenance that keeps efficiency high and catches cheap fixes early.
Blower & motor repair
Failed blower motors, capacitors, and fan issues restored to spec.
AC installation & replacement
Properly sized new systems with load calculations, from value units to high-SEER equipment.
Heat pump service
Install, repair, and tune-ups for air-source and cold-climate heat pumps.
Heating & Cooling in Manor, Texas
Texas heat is a season-long endurance test — Manor air conditioners routinely run from March to November, and grid-stressing summer peaks make efficient, well-maintained equipment pay for itself. Sudden winter freezes have also proven that reliable heating can't be an afterthought. Local providers like Brothers Heating Cooling understand these conditions and service equipment accordingly.
Common HVAC Problems in Manor
Water around the indoor unit
Pooling water typically means a clogged condensate drain line. Caught early it is a quick fix; ignored, it can damage floors, drywall, and the air handler itself.
Strange noises at startup
Grinding, squealing, or banging at startup often signals worn bearings, a loose blower wheel, or delayed furnace ignition — all worth addressing before they become breakdowns.
Frozen evaporator coil
Ice on the indoor coil chokes cooling entirely. Restricted airflow or low refrigerant are the usual causes, and running the unit while frozen risks compressor damage.
Thermostat not matching room temperature
When rooms feel different from the set temperature, the fix may be as simple as thermostat placement or as involved as duct balancing and zoning.
Why Choose a Local Texas Company
Understanding the regional climate means recommendations sized for real conditions, not national averages. Local technicians know the housing stock — from older homes with aging ductwork to new builds with high-efficiency systems. A provider who works these neighborhoods daily has seen your exact system and failure pattern before.
Seasonal Tips for Texas Homes
- Shade the outdoor unit if possible, but keep at least two feet of clearance for airflow on all sides.
- Keep the condensate drain line clear; in humid climates algae builds fast and an overflow can shut the system down mid-summer.
- Watch humidity, not just temperature: a system that cools but does not dehumidify may be oversized or low on refrigerant.
- Rinse the outdoor condenser coil each spring — in long cooling seasons a dirty coil can cut efficiency by double digits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is emergency HVAC service available?
Many local providers, including Brothers Heating Cooling, take urgent calls — a failed furnace in winter or dead AC in a heat wave should not wait. Call (512) 387-2158 to check availability.
Do heat pumps work in Texas?
Modern cold-climate heat pumps perform well across Texas's typical temperature range, and they both heat and cool. The right fit depends on your home's insulation and existing ductwork.
Why is my AC running constantly in summer?
During heat waves some runtime is normal, but nonstop operation with poor cooling suggests low refrigerant, dirty coils, duct leaks, or an undersized system. A service visit can pinpoint which.
What size HVAC system does my home need?
Sizing depends on square footage, insulation, windows, ceiling height, and local climate — not guesswork. An oversized unit short-cycles and an undersized one never keeps up, so a proper load calculation matters.
How long does an air conditioner last?
A well-maintained central air conditioner typically lasts 12–17 years. Systems that run long seasons or skip maintenance wear out sooner, while regular tune-ups and prompt repairs stretch lifespan toward the upper end.
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