An HVAC inspection is different from a tune-up. A tune-up actively maintains equipment through a systematic 21-point protocol — refrigerant charge gets verified and adjusted, coils get cleaned, capacitors reading below 90% of nameplate get replaced during the visit. An inspection documents equipment condition without necessarily making adjustments. The distinction matters because inspections serve specific purposes: pre-purchase due diligence during real estate transactions, insurance claim documentation after storm or water damage events, warranty coverage verification when major failures occur under manufacturer warranty, and comprehensive baseline assessment on aging equipment before major repair-versus-replace decisions. Each of these situations needs documentation-quality reporting more than adjustment work. This page walks through what our inspection scope covers, what the written report includes, how the premium documentation package differs from standard inspection, and specific Bluffdale scenarios where inspection service produces real value.
Home inspection reports commonly flag “HVAC further evaluation recommended” on equipment over 15 years old, on gas-fired appliances requiring combustion analyzer verification, or on systems with unusual operating characteristics observed during general home inspection. Our HVAC inspection provides the specialized evaluation general home inspectors can’t perform: refrigerant charge subcooling/superheat analysis, combustion analyzer readings on gas equipment, static pressure verification, heat exchanger visual and functional inspection, and documented equipment condition with photos. Buyers use the report for negotiation, price adjustment discussions, or seller repair requests before closing.
Storm damage, hail damage to outdoor condensers, water damage from ceiling leaks reaching air handlers, lightning-induced compressor failures, and other insurance-covered HVAC events require documentation supporting the claim. Our inspection provides before-and-after photos, damage assessment with technical specification of affected components, cost estimates for repair versus replacement, and written report suitable for insurance adjuster review. Many insurance carriers accept licensed HVAC contractor inspection in place of general property adjuster assessment.
Major component failures on relatively-new equipment (compressor failure under 10-year parts warranty, heat exchanger failure under 20-year warranty on newer condensing furnaces) often trigger manufacturer warranty investigation. Our inspection provides documentation the manufacturer requires: equipment installation date, model and serial numbers, operating conditions leading up to failure, evidence supporting warranty rather than misuse or improper installation, and coordinated warranty claim filing through the dealer portal.
Equipment approaching 15+ years of service benefits from documentation-quality baseline inspection. Comprehensive inspection captures current condition (refrigerant charge, combustion analyzer readings, static pressure, static pressure across each duct section, heat exchanger condition, capacitor microfarad, motor amperage) so future service can be compared against baseline. This is particularly valuable before major repair decisions — is $2,800 worth investing in equipment with 3–5 years of remaining life, or is replacement the better call?
Water damage events (roof leaks reaching air handlers in attic installations, plumbing failures flooding basement mechanical rooms, sewer backups reaching furnace burner cabinets) require professional assessment for insurance documentation and safety verification. Water damage to gas-fired equipment can produce corrosion damage that affects combustion safety months after the initial event. Inspection catches these issues before they produce CO exposure risk.
Severe thunderstorms and lightning strikes can produce direct compressor damage, control board failures, or induced surges reaching HVAC electronics. Inspection catches damaged components and documents the storm event for insurance claim support. Bluffdale summer monsoon season (late July–mid August) produces the highest lightning risk period.
Subcooling and superheat measurement at current operating conditions, compared against manufacturer specification. Operating pressures documented (suction and discharge). Refrigerant line insulation inspection. Visual leak inspection on all accessible connections, electronic leak detection on any suspicious areas. Refrigerant type verification (R-22 legacy versus R-410A current versus R-454B on newest 2025+ equipment).
Capacitor microfarad readings against nameplate on all motor start and run capacitors. Contactor condition (visual arc damage, coil resistance). Wire connection integrity. Motor amperage readings against nameplate FLA on compressor, condenser fan motor, blower motor. Voltage delivery from disconnect. Grounding verification.
Combustion analyzer readings via Bacharach InsightPlus or equivalent: CO air-free, stack temperature, O2 percentage, combustion efficiency. Draft measurement on atmospheric-vented equipment. Manifold gas pressure verification. Burner assembly inspection with photo documentation. Ignition system operation (hot surface igniter resistance, direct spark electrode gap and condition). Flame sensor microamperage.
Primary heat exchanger visual inspection via combustion chamber access with photo documentation. Secondary heat exchanger inspection on condensing furnaces. Functional test observing flame behavior with blower operation (flame disturbance indicates integrity issues). Vent connector inspection. Documentation of any visible cracks, corrosion, or scale deposits.
Blower motor amperage verification against nameplate. Static pressure measurement at multiple points (supply plenum, return plenum, before and after filter). Airflow measurement using hood or grille anemometer. Duct connection integrity visual inspection. ECM operation verification on variable-speed systems.
High-limit switch operation. Rollout switch operation. Pressure switch operation. Float switch operation on air handler drain systems. CO detector functionality verification if requested.
Photos of every major component: outdoor condenser (nameplate, coil condition, electrical connections), indoor air handler (blower, evaporator coil, drain pan), furnace (burner assembly, heat exchanger visible surfaces, ignition components), any visible concerns identified during inspection.
Comprehensive written report suitable for real estate transaction, insurance claim, warranty documentation, or homeowner reference. Report includes: equipment identification (make, model, serial, installation date if determinable, warranty status), all measurement readings with acceptable range references, photo documentation of every major component and any concerns, specific findings and recommendations, and repair cost estimates for any identified issues.
Bluffdale’s 4,436 ft elevation reduces air density by 15% versus sea level baseline. This affects subcooling and superheat interpretation because condenser heat rejection is meaningfully affected by lower air density. Correct analysis requires manufacturer specification appropriate for the actual operating altitude, not just sea level specs. Inspection reports document altitude-corrected analysis where applicable.
Condensate drain systems on cooling equipment show mineral scale accumulation from Jordan Aquifer 15–25 grains per gallon hardness. Inspection notes drain line condition, evaporator drain pan condition, and float switch operation. Blocked or partially-obstructed drain systems flagged for repair before ceiling water damage occurs.
Inspection during or immediately after PCAPS inversion season (November–February) captures elevated filter loading typical for the season. Static pressure readings elevated from filter loading noted with recommendation for post-inversion filter replacement.
Legacy 80% AFUE furnaces on older Bluffdale Heights, Redwood Road, and Pony Express Road homes may have heat exchangers approaching or exceeding rated service life. Detailed inspection with combustion analyzer readings and heat exchanger visual documentation captures current condition and supports repair-versus-replace decision-making.
Properties adjacent to Camp Williams sometimes see heavy equipment operations that affect building depressurization. Inspection of atmospheric-vented gas appliances (older furnaces, standard water heaters, gas fireplaces with natural draft) includes combustion air adequacy verification.
Homes at Suncrest (5,300 ft) and Draper foothills produce elevated respiratory sensitivity in some occupants due to reduced ambient air density. Inspection reports include recommendations for enhanced IAQ interventions (MERV 13+, HEPA bypass supplementation) that address respiratory comfort in high-elevation applications.
HVAC inspection scheduling, real estate transaction inspection coordination, insurance claim documentation, warranty coverage verification, and post-water-damage assessment all route through the office at 14659 S 855 W. Whether you’re coordinating pre-purchase due diligence on a 1985 Bluffdale Heights ranch home, documenting hail damage to an outdoor condenser after a summer thunderstorm in Independence at the Point, or filing a manufacturer warranty claim on a 6-year-old compressor failure in Porter Rockwell Estates, our licensed team dispatches with comprehensive inspection equipment and delivers documentation suitable for the specific purpose.