The Forgotten Part of Your System
Everyone thinks about the furnace. Few people think about what happens after the air leaves it. But your ductwork delivers all that heated air to your rooms—and if it's leaking, crushed, or poorly designed, you're losing efficiency and comfort.
Studies suggest typical homes lose 20-30% of conditioned air through duct leaks. In a Minnesota winter, that's a significant chunk of your heating bill escaping into your attic, crawlspace, or walls.
Signs of Ductwork Problems
Uneven Temperatures
Some rooms too cold, others too warm? Before blaming the furnace, consider the delivery system. A disconnected duct run, crushed flex duct, or closed damper can starve certain rooms of heat.
High Heating Bills
If your bills keep climbing but your usage hasn't changed, leaky ducts might be the culprit. You're paying to heat air that never reaches your rooms.
Dusty House
Ducts running through dusty attics or dirty crawlspaces can pull in contaminants through gaps. If you're constantly dusting despite a clean filter, your ductwork may have leaks.
Noisy Airflow
Whistling, rattling, or popping from your ducts indicates problems—air escaping through gaps, loose connections, or metal expanding and contracting more than it should.
Our Ductwork Services
Duct Sealing
We seal joints, connections, and seams with mastic and professional-grade tape. Not the cloth "duct tape" that fails within a year—actual sealing materials that last.
Duct Repair
Fix disconnected sections, replace crushed flex ducts, repair damaged insulation. We work in attics, basements, and crawlspaces to get your duct system functioning properly.
Duct Replacement
Sometimes old ductwork is beyond saving—rusted, deteriorated, or just poorly designed from the start. We design and install new duct systems sized correctly for your home.
Duct Installation
Adding on to your home? Finishing a basement? Converting a space? We install new ductwork to extend your existing system or create new zones.
Ductwork in Minnesota Homes
Maple Grove homes span decades of construction, each with its own ductwork approach:
- 1950s-60s homes: Often have undersized original ductwork
- 1970s-80s homes: Mixed quality, some good, some corners cut
- 1990s-2000s: More flex duct, sometimes poorly installed
- Newer construction: Generally better, but not always perfect
We've worked on all of it. Whatever your home has, we can evaluate it and improve it.