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🌬️ Ventilation Services in Mustang, OK

Ductwork repair, sealing, replacement, and ventilation balance. Static pressure testing and Manual D design. Serving Mustang and the OKC metro since 2009. OK CIB #00125054. A+ BBB. 5.0★ from 100+ 5-star Google reviews.

📋 OK CIB #00125054 🏆 A+ BBB ⚡ Response 35-50 minutes ⭐ 5.0 from 100+ 5-star Google reviews 💰 0% APR Financing
Mustang Ventilation Services

Ventilation Services in Mustang, Oklahoma

Ventilation work in Mustang covers ductwork repair and replacement, mechanical ventilation upgrades for tight newer homes (ERV/HRV), and bathroom/kitchen exhaust improvements. Older Mustang homes often have ductwork in unconditioned attics with 25–40% leakage — measurable via duct blaster testing and addressable with mastic sealing or partial replacement. Edmond-to-Mustang drive: 35–50 minutes via SH-152 (Mustang Rd).

Older Mustang housing — the homes along North Mustang Road, around the high school, and in the original town center — is typically 1970s-1990s on slab with original or once-replaced HVAC. Many of these homes hit a decision point in the next 5 years: replace aging R-22 systems (the refrigerant is now $200+/lb wholesale, making repairs unaffordable) with modern R-410A or R-454B equipment, or limp along through another failure season. We give honest replace-vs-repair guidance based on the actual condition of the equipment, not on what makes the bigger ticket.

Mustang is in the southwest tornado-frequency zone — the same corridor that the May 20, 2013 EF5 tracked through, and the May 6, 2015 tornadoes affected directly. Several Mustang neighborhoods east of Mustang Road show the rebuild pattern: newer construction interspersed with older homes that survived. For homes in tornado-hit areas we recommend hail-guard cages on outdoor units and reinforced refrigerant line set strapping — small upgrades that prevent expensive damage in the next storm cycle.

Mustang lies just southwest of OKC at slightly higher elevation than the urban core. Like Yukon, it gets western wind exposure and prairie dust impact on condensers. The town has been one of the fastest-growing in the OKC metro since 2010, with new subdivisions continuing to push west and south.

Mustang is dominated by 2000s-2020s tract construction — Mustang Run, Silverhawk, and Trails of Mustang are largely under 20 years old. Most homes have 95% AFUE furnaces and 14-16 SEER condensers, with the earliest builds now starting their first major-component replacement cycle (compressors, blower motors, control boards). Older Mustang Estates homes from the 1970s-80s have aging equipment and often-original ductwork that wasn't designed for modern AC airflow rates.

Common Ventilation Services Issues We See in Mustang

Across our service area, certain ventilation services situations come up over and over. Here are the ones we see most often in Mustang and how we approach them:

Hot/cold rooms (the most common Oklahoma issue)

Almost always a duct sizing or balance problem, not an HVAC capacity problem. Replacing the AC will not fix it. Static pressure testing and Manual D rebalance solve it.

High utility bills with apparently healthy HVAC

Duct leaks can lose 20-30% of heated and cooled air to attic and crawl spaces. Sealing closes that loss.

Dust everywhere, even with good filtration

Return ducts pulling in unfiltered attic air (a code violation but extremely common in 1970s-1990s Oklahoma construction). Sealing fixes it.

Whistling or popping noises from ducts

Static pressure too high — restricted returns, undersized supply ducts, or oversized blower. Measurement and rework solves it.

Mold in registers or visible moisture on ducts in attic

Uninsulated ductwork in humid Oklahoma attics sweats and grows biofilm. Re-insulation or full duct replacement solves it.

Furnace or AC runs constantly during peak season

Often the system is fine — but the ductwork cannot move enough air to satisfy the load. Static pressure measurement reveals the bottleneck.

How ARP Heat And Air Handles Ventilation Services in Mustang

  1. Diagnostic visitStatic pressure measurement (the single most important ductwork test), thermal imaging of supply temperatures, duct inspection in attic/crawl, return airflow measurement.
  2. Findings and quoteSpecific problem list with photos. Most issues have multiple solution levels — start with sealing, progress to rebalancing, only replace if structurally necessary.
  3. Sealing workMastic at every accessible joint, fabric tape on larger seams, foam at register boots. Aeroseal (computerized aerosol sealing) for inaccessible interior duct runs.
  4. VerificationRe-measure static pressure and supply temperatures after sealing. Quantify leakage reduction (typical: 30-50% leakage reduction on a poorly-sealed system).
  5. Long-term recommendationsFor systems beyond sealing, we provide a phased plan — add returns this year, replace supply runs next season, upgrade to variable-speed blower in 5 years.

Typical Ventilation Services Pricing in Mustang, Oklahoma

  • Basic duct sealing (mastic at joints): $600-$1,200
  • Aeroseal whole-system seal: $1,800-$3,500
  • Return air upgrade (new return + larger duct): $800-$1,800
  • Supply duct extension to new room: $400-$900 per run
  • Full duct replacement (small home): $3,500-$6,500
  • Full duct replacement (larger home): $6,500-$10,000
  • Manual D duct design and rebalancing: $450-$950

A note from Charlie

I have been doing HVAC work across Canadian County since 2009. We are not the biggest HVAC company in the OKC metro, and we do not want to be. We are a small owner-operated business that fixes things right and treats Mustang homeowners the way I want my own family treated.

When you call (405) 413-0583, there is a good chance I pick up personally. If I do not, you get a real technician who knows what they are doing — not a phone-room operator reading from a script.

— Charlie, owner-operator, ARP Heat And Air

Financing from $79/month

0% APR options for qualified buyers. Standard fixed-rate financing for 640+ credit. Secondary lender options down to 580. Same-day soft-credit approval — no impact to your score until you accept terms. No prepayment penalties on any tier.

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Frequently Asked

Ventilation Services FAQs from Mustang Homeowners

How much does duct sealing cost?

Basic sealing (mastic at all accessible joints, takeoffs, and register boots): $600-$1,200. Aeroseal whole-system sealing (recommended for older homes with significant leakage in inaccessible areas): $1,800-$3,500. Full duct replacement: $3,500-$10,000 depending on home size.

How do I know if I have duct problems?

Common signs: rooms that never reach the thermostat setpoint, high utility bills with apparently healthy HVAC, dust accumulation even after frequent cleaning, whistling noises from registers, visible duct disconnection in the attic. A static pressure test gives definitive answers.

What is static pressure and why does it matter?

Static pressure measures the resistance to airflow through your duct system. Healthy systems run 0.3-0.5 inches of water column (in. wc) total external static pressure. Most Oklahoma homes we test run 0.7-1.1 in. wc — way too high — which kills capacity, wears out blowers, and shortens equipment life. It is the single most important duct measurement.

Will sealing my ducts actually save money?

Yes. Typical Oklahoma duct systems lose 20-30% of heated/cooled air to leakage. Sealing recovers most of that loss — typical utility bill reduction is 8-15% annually. Sealing also improves comfort and reduces dust.

What is Aeroseal and is it worth it?

Aeroseal is a computerized process that pressurizes the duct system and injects an aerosol sealant that adheres to leak sites from the inside. It seals leaks that are physically inaccessible (inside walls, in tight attic runs). Cost is higher than manual sealing but covers areas manual sealing cannot reach. Worth it for older homes with significant inaccessible leakage.

Can ductwork be added to a room without it?

Usually yes, depending on attic or crawl space access and main trunk capacity. A new supply run typically costs $400-$900 depending on length and complexity. Adding a return is equally important and often forgotten.

What is Manual D and do I need it?

Manual D is the ACCA standard for residential duct sizing and design. It calculates the exact size each duct needs to be based on the system's airflow and the home's load. Most production-builder ductwork is sized by rules of thumb that produce significant performance problems. Proper Manual D design ($450-$950) is worth it for any major ductwork change.

Should I replace ductwork when I replace my HVAC?

Often, yes — at least the trunk lines and any visibly damaged sections. Modern higher-efficiency systems move more air at lower static pressure than older equipment. Old undersized ductwork bottlenecks new equipment and prevents you from getting the efficiency you paid for.

Local Notes

Local context for ductwork & ventilation in Mustang

📍 CountyCanadian County
⚡ Electric utilityOG&E (primary); OEC covers portions
🔥 Natural gasOklahoma Natural Gas (ONG)
📮 ZIP codes73064

Typical Mustang housing stock

Mustang is predominantly 1990s–2020s suburban construction. The city has grown rapidly with the western expansion of the OKC metro, and most of the housing stock postdates 2000.

What we typically see in Mustang

Mustang homes are generally newer, so we see more maintenance and repair work than full replacement here. Common: 13 SEER systems from 2008–2012 that are at the natural replacement point but still serviceable, and condenser-fan-motor failures in homes near construction dust.

From Charlie

Typical response is 35–50 minutes from our Edmond shop. We make this drive frequently — Mustang is one of our growth markets.

Need Ventilation Services in Mustang?

35-50 minutes typical response. $89 diagnostic, applied toward your repair. No overtime fees, ever.

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