Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Camp Swift, TX | Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service Texas
Carrier air duct cleaning in Camp Swift typically runs $350–$650 for a full system, depending on whether your home sits in the 2011 Bastrop Complex Fire perimeter and how much sticky loblolly pine pollen has built up inside the return lines. We’re an independent Carrier service provider — not manufacturer-authorized — and we bring Rotobrush and Nikro equipment to every Camp Swift job, with Michael Brown, our owner, running the tools himself. Call (844) 886-2161 for a free estimate and same-day availability.
Why Camp Swift Residents Choose Us for Carrier Service
We’ve been cleaning Carrier systems in Bastrop County for eight years, and the Lost Pines ecosystem keeps teaching us new wrinkles. Michael Brown grew up in Oak Cliff, trained on HVAC fundamentals at Eastfield College in Mesquite, and built Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service from crawling through attics — not from a desk. He still shows up and does the work. That matters in Camp Swift, where a technician needs to know whether your home was standing before September 2011 before deciding which tools to unload.
Our 4.9-star average across 775 verified reviews didn’t come from sending crews. It came from Michael arriving with a Rotobrush machine, a Nikro HEPA vacuum, and a borescope camera. He’ll show you what’s in there before he tells you what to do about it. For Carrier owners in the 78602 corridor, that transparency matters — because what we find in Camp Swift ducts often surprises homeowners who’ve already had “standard” cleanings elsewhere.
We stock OEM Carrier blower motors and control boards for the Performance, Comfort, and Infinity series. For flex-duct repairs, we use worm-gear clamps that outlast OEM spring clamps in Blackland Prairie soil conditions. Equipment built for this job. Eight years focused on one trade. 775 customers. 4.9 stars. See for yourself.
Common Carrier Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Camp Swift
- Disconnected flex-duct boots from trunk collars. Pre-2011 slab homes in Camp Swift sit on Blackland Prairie clay that shifts with seasonal moisture. We’ve found Carrier Comfort Series FB4C systems with boots pulled completely free, dumping conditioned air into attics. Our video inspection catches this before cleaning begins — no point in scrubbing ducts that aren’t connected.
- Sticky yellow pollen film coating return ducts. The Lost Pines’ isolated loblolly pines release resinous pollen each spring that standard vacuums can’t remove. On Carrier Performance FE4A systems, we pre-treat with enzymatic solution, then run rotary brushes to break the bond. A shop vac just smears it around.
- Mold at evaporator coils and adjacent duct sections. Camp Swift’s higher humidity versus Austin’s western suburbs keeps Carrier coils damp through July and August. We clean coils and nearby ductwork together — treating one without the other is half a job.
- Fine gray ash in low flex-duct runs from the 2011 Bastrop Complex Fire. Homes that survived inside the burn perimeter — including many along the 21 fire-damaged subdivisions — still harbor ash settled at flex points. Ordinary cleaning misses it. We use HEPA agitation and post-cleaning camera verification to confirm zero residual ash.
- Construction debris in post-2012 rebuilds. The wave of Camp Swift rebuilds from 2012–2016 often retained original attic duct layouts. If post-build cleaning was skipped, we’re still pulling drywall dust and insulation scraps from Carrier WeatherMaker 8000 systems a decade later.
Carrier Service in Camp Swift: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Post-2011 Burn Zone homes in Camp Swift’s 78602 — especially those along the 21 fire-damaged subdivisions like Tahitian Village — still harbor fine ash in flex-duct low points that ordinary cleaning misses, requiring our specialized HEPA agitation and post-cleaning camera verification to fully eliminate. We cleaned a Carrier Performance FE4A system in a Tahitian Village home that survived the 2011 fire. Our video inspection revealed a gray-white ash layer settled in the flex-duct runs near the air handler, which we removed using a HEPA agitation tool followed by a post-cleaning camera scan to confirm zero residual ash. The homeowner reported immediate relief from the musty “campfire” smell that had persisted for over a decade.
This isn’t a generic duct cleaning scenario. The combination of Lost Pines loblolly pollen and wildfire ash legacy creates a two-pronged contamination problem in Camp Swift Carrier systems that requires techniques absent from standard cleaning guides. The pollen provides a sticky substrate; the ash provides fine particulates that embed in it. Together, they reduce airflow, strain blower motors, and recirculate odor every time the system cycles. Generic cleaners don’t ask about fire history. We do.
Carrier Models & Products We Service in Camp Swift
We clean and maintain the full Carrier residential lineup found in Camp Swift homes: Performance Series variable-speed air handlers (FE4A, FV4C), Comfort Series fixed-speed units (FB4C, FF1D), Infinity Series with Greenspeed intelligence (FV4C, FE5A), and legacy WeatherMaker 8000/9000 furnaces still common in pre-2011 ranch stock.
For critical components — blower motors, control boards, ECM modules — we source OEM Carrier parts to protect system compatibility and warranty status. For flex-duct connections and sealing, we specify aftermarket worm-gear clamps and mastic tape that outperform OEM spring clamps in Camp Swift’s shifting clay soil. We carry common Carrier consumables on our Camp Swift service vehicle to avoid delays. If your Infinity system’s variable-speed blower needs attention, Michael Brown has the training and tools to address it without routing you through a generalist HVAC company that treats ductwork as an afterthought.
Carrier Service Pricing in Camp Swift
Most Carrier air duct cleaning jobs in Camp Swift fall between $350 and $650. The low end covers standard cleaning for post-2016 homes with accessible ductwork and minimal contamination. The high end reflects 2011 Burn Zone homes requiring HEPA agitation for ash removal, multiple video inspection passes, and evaporator coil cleaning to address mold from Lost Pines humidity.
| Service Component | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Standard full-system duct cleaning | $350–$450 |
| With video inspection and coil cleaning | $450–$550 |
| Burn Zone homes: HEPA agitation + verification | $550–$650 |
| Dryer vent cleaning (add-on) | $125–$175 |
Every estimate is free and includes a preliminary video inspection so you see what we see before committing. No pricing surprises after we’re in your attic. Call (844) 886-2161 to schedule — we’ll confirm whether your Camp Swift address falls within the 2011 fire perimeter and quote accordingly.
Serving Camp Swift, TX — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Camp Swift 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 — Carrier Air Duct Cleaning in Camp Swift
Yes, if your home survived inside the burn perimeter. Standard rotary brushing won’t dislodge fine ash embedded in flex-duct low points — we’ve verified this with camera inspections in dozens of 78602 homes. We use HEPA agitation tools and post-cleaning camera scans to confirm complete removal. Call (844) 886-2161 for a free inspection; we’ll check your address against the fire perimeter map.
That’s Lost Pines loblolly pine pollen — resinous and adhesive, unlike the lighter pollen in Austin’s western suburbs. It coats Carrier return ducts and traps subsequent dust layers. Standard vacuuming fails; we use enzymatic pre-treatment followed by rotary brush agitation. The film returns annually, so we recommend cleaning before peak summer demand. Call (844) 886-2161 to schedule before the next heat wave.
Usually, yes — if the source is mold in ductwork or on the evaporator coil. Camp Swift’s higher humidity keeps Carrier coils damp longer than in drier areas, supporting mold growth that intensifies when systems run continuously in July and August. We clean coils and adjacent ducts together. If odor persists after our work, we’ll inspect for duct leaks pulling attic air — a separate issue we also seal. Call (844) 886-2161 for diagnosis.
Yes, with adjusted technique. Pre-2011 Camp Swift ranch flex duct is often brittle from age and heat exposure. We reduce brush RPM and use softer-bristle heads on our Rotobrush system, with continuous camera monitoring. If we find disconnections or fire damage, we’ll show you and recommend repair or replacement — no pressure, just documentation. Michael Brown makes those calls on-site, not from an office.
Yes. We’re independent — not Carrier-authorized — but we’ve cleaned and maintained Infinity Series FV4C and FE5A systems in Camp Swift for eight years. The variable-speed blower requires careful handling during duct cleaning to avoid ECM module damage. We use OEM-specified procedures and stock common Infinity replacement parts for fast turnaround if issues arise.
Service Areas Near Camp Swift
We run Carrier service calls throughout Bastrop County and into the eastern Austin metro from our Camp Swift base. Nearby areas include Bastrop proper, Smithville to the southeast, Elgin to the north, and La Grange for larger commercial duct systems. For Dallas-area customers, we maintain a separate service route covering Lackland Air Force Base, Highland Park, Alief, University Park, and Bellaire — call to confirm scheduling.
Book Your Carrier Service in Camp Swift Today
Same-day appointments available for Camp Swift Carrier owners. Michael Brown brings the equipment, the camera, and eight years of Lost Pines-specific experience to your door. Clean ducts to sealed ducts to healthier air — one call covers the full pathway. Call (844) 886-2161 now for your free estimate.
Written by Michael Brown, Owner at Summit Air Duct Cleaning Service, serving Camp Swift and Bastrop County since 2016.