Minneapolis experiences some of the widest temperature swings in the country. A November day might reach 50 degrees, then drop to 15 degrees overnight. Your furnace cycles on and off repeatedly during mild weather, then runs almost continuously during cold snaps. This pattern stresses ignitors, heat exchangers, and blower motors more than steady operation would. Hot surface ignitors expand and contract with each heating cycle. After thousands of cycles, they develop microfractures and fail. When they fail, your furnace blowing cold air is the first symptom. The blower runs, but ignition never occurs. This failure pattern is so common in our climate that we stock multiple ignitor types for same-day replacement.
Minneapolis homeowners also benefit from working with technicians who understand local HVAC code requirements and building stock. Many homes in Seward, Nokomis, and Northeast Minneapolis were built between 1920 and 1960. These homes often have furnaces in small mechanical rooms with limited combustion air. Modern high-efficiency furnaces need adequate fresh air for proper combustion. When installers fail to provide code-compliant air intake, the furnace starves for oxygen. Flames become lazy and yellow instead of crisp and blue. The flame sensor reads inconsistent combustion and shuts down the gas valve. You get cold air from the vents. We identify these installation problems and correct them according to Minneapolis mechanical code requirements.