Riverside experiences 40-degree temperature swings between morning lows and afternoon highs during winter months. When your furnace cycles on during a cold morning, the heat exchanger expands as it heats. When outdoor temperatures climb and your furnace shuts off, the metal contracts. This expansion and contraction cycle stresses welds and seams in the heat exchanger. Older furnaces in neighborhoods like Alessandro Heights and Hawarden Hills were installed before high-efficiency designs became standard. These older heat exchangers use thinner gauge steel that develops stress cracks after 15 to 20 years of thermal cycling. A small crack in the heat exchanger allows combustion gases to mix with circulating air, creating a carbon monoxide hazard even if you do not smell gas.
Riverside County requires natural gas work to be performed by licensed contractors who pull permits for gas line modifications. We maintain current contractor licenses and pull permits when required for gas line repairs that involve pipe replacement or system modifications. This protects you from code violations that can affect home sale transactions or insurance claims. Our technicians know the local inspection requirements and ensure all work passes final inspection without callbacks. When you hire unlicensed repair services, you risk code violations, insurance claim denials, and liability if a leak causes property damage or injury. We document every repair to meet Riverside County building department standards and provide you with records that satisfy disclosure requirements.