Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Attleboro, MA | Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Massachusetts
Lennox air duct cleaning in Attleboro typically runs $350–$650 for a full residential system, with most jobs completed in a single visit. What makes our work different here isn’t the brand name on the furnace—it’s the 11 years we’ve spent inside Attleboro’s retrofit ductwork, where original coal-furnace trunks meet 1980s flex duct in ways that standard cleaning protocols simply don’t address. We use Rotobrush and Nikro equipment to clean what other companies miss. Call (888) 597-5659 for a free estimate.
Why Attleboro Residents Choose Us for Lennox Service
We’re not a franchise dispatching whoever’s available that morning. Scott Gray handles every job personally—the same person who answers your phone call is the one crawling through your basement with the brush system. That matters in Attleboro, where a Lennox G50 Merit Series in a 1910 cape on County Street demands different handling than the same model in a 1985 split-level near Plainville.
Scott grew up in Worcester, not far from Green Hill Park, and got his start in HVAC fundamentals through the sheet metal and building systems program at Quinsigamond Community College. Those mechanical basics still shape how he diagnoses a system before touching a brush. Eleven years focused on one thing—air duct and dryer vent systems—means we’ve seen the specific debris patterns that Lennox equipment produces in New England’s retrofit housing stock.
617 customers have rated us 4.9 stars. We use Rotobrush brush-system technology, Nikro HEPA vacuums, and Abatement Technologies air scrubbers—the same equipment commercial contractors specify. For sanitizing and filtration, we work with Honeywell, Aprilaire, and Guardsman products. We clean it, repair it, and seal it. No rotating crews, no upsell pressure from technicians working on commission.
Common Lennox Air Duct Cleaning Problems We Solve in Attleboro
- Debris-jammed supply plenums in retrofit systems. Lennox G50 Merit and G10 Series furnaces in Attleboro’s mill-era homes often connect to original gravity hot-air trunks—18-24 inch diameter, uninsulated galvanized steel—that were spliced with flexible duct during 1970s-1990s conversions. The junction points trap decades of compacted debris. Standard vacuum suction alone won’t dislodge it; we use rotary brush agitation first.
- Condensation-driven mold in low-lying neighborhoods. Attleboro sits in the Ten Mile River watershed, and homes near downtown or along the river corridor experience groundwater migration into uninsulated basement ductwork. Lennox Signature Series air handlers and Elite Series coil units in these conditions develop persistent humidity inside supply and return runs, creating mold-friendly environments even during heating season.
- Oil-to-gas conversion residue. Many Attleboro Lennox systems were converted from oil heat decades ago, leaving a greasy black film inside supply trunks. This residue attracts and binds new particulates. We apply heated degreaser before mechanical cleaning—skipping this step just smears the problem around.
- Return plenum corrosion in pre-WWII housing. Lennox equipment retrofitted into original coal-furnace plenums creates oversized dead-air spaces in Attleboro’s 1890s-1940s worker housing. These spaces accumulate debris and bypass standard cleaning tools. We inspect with video first, then select brush diameter and vacuum CFM to match the actual geometry—not the nominal duct size.
- Pollen and particulate loading from year-round HVAC cycling. New England’s hard freeze-thaw cycle and muggy summers mean Attleboro Lennox systems run heating and cooling for extended stretches, cycling a full year’s worth of outdoor contaminants through ducts that rarely get serviced. The result: supply registers that look clean while the trunk lines behind them are packed solid.
Lennox Service in Attleboro: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
In Attleboro’s downtown mill-era neighborhoods—streets like Park Row and the blocks around County and Union Streets—our techs regularly open Lennox systems and find something no generic cleaning checklist accounts for. Original gravity hot-air coal furnace trunks, installed when these homes were built for jewelry factory workers, were spliced with flexible duct during 1970s-1990s forced-air retrofits. The junction points are almost always unsealed. And they’re packed with decades of compacted debris that standard vacuuming alone cannot remove.
On a recent job on Park Row—a street of 1900s worker capes near downtown—we opened a Lennox G50 Merit system’s basement supply trunk and found an 18-inch round galvanized relic from an original coal furnace, spliced with 30-year-old flex duct. The junction was unsealed and held a football-sized wad of compressed lint, soot, and rodent nesting. We used rotary brush agitation and a HEPA vacuum to clear the block, then sealed the joint with mastic to prevent re-contamination. If I wouldn’t leave it in my own house, I’m not leaving it in yours.
This isn’t a Plainville problem. It’s not a Mansfield problem. Attleboro’s identity as a historic jewelry-manufacturing center created this specific housing stock, and the ductwork retrofits that followed created cleaning challenges that only show up here. That’s why a technician who’s worked your ZIP code—02703—matters more than a brand authorization on a truck door.
Lennox Models & Products We Service in Attleboro
We clean and service Lennox G50 Merit Series furnaces, Lennox G10 Series gas furnaces, Lennox Signature Series air handlers, and Lennox Elite Series coil units. These are the model families we encounter most frequently in Attleboro’s residential stock, from 1970s conversions through present-day replacements.
For critical replacement parts—motors, control boards, OEM-spec filters—we source genuine Lennox components. For duct materials like flex duct, mastic sealant, and insulation, we use quality aftermarket equivalents that match OEM specifications. This saves you money without the performance compromise. We stock common Lennox filter sizes and sealant materials locally for fast turnaround, and we always provide an honest assessment of whether repair, replacement, or cleaning is most cost-effective for your specific system age and condition.
Lennox Service Pricing in Attleboro
Lennox air duct cleaning in Attleboro typically falls in these ranges:
- Full system cleaning with video inspection: $350–$650
- Duct sealing with mastic sealant (per system): $200–$400
- Evaporator coil cleaning and antimicrobial treatment: $150–$300
- Combined cleaning + sealing + coil service package: $550–$950
What drives cost: system accessibility (retrofit basement runs take longer), contamination severity (oil residue requires degreaser pretreatment), and whether repair or sealing is needed beyond standard cleaning. Our free estimate includes a full video inspection of your trunk lines and plenums—no charge, no obligation. Call (888) 597-5659 to schedule; we’ll give you an exact quote after seeing your specific Lennox setup.
Serving Attleboro, MA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Attleboro 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 — Lennox Air Duct Cleaning in Attleboro
Yes. These retrofits are exactly what we specialize in. We encounter original coal-furnace trunks spliced with flex duct on a regular basis in Attleboro’s downtown neighborhoods, and we have the brush systems and HEPA vacuums to clean junction points that standard equipment can’t reach. Call (888) 597-5659 for a free inspection—we’ll show you what’s in there before we quote.
Yes, persistent humidity creates ideal conditions for mold growth inside Lennox air handlers and duct interiors, particularly in Signature Series and Elite Series equipment with internal coil compartments. We address this with full system cleaning plus antimicrobial coil treatment, and we’ll identify where moisture is entering your ductwork. Call (888) 597-5659—damp ducts don’t improve on their own.
We’re an independent Lennox service provider, not manufacturer-authorized. Our cleaning protocols are developed from 11 years of field experience with Lennox equipment across Massachusetts, using Rotobrush, Nikro, and Abatement Technologies equipment that meets or exceeds industry standards. We know the debris patterns and failure modes specific to Lennox systems in Attleboro’s housing stock—expertise that comes from repetition, not certification paperwork.
Very likely, if the conversion was done without thorough duct cleaning afterward. Oil residue creates a greasy black film that attracts and binds new particulates. We apply heated degreaser before mechanical cleaning to break down this residue—standard vacuuming alone won’t remove it. The presence of oil film is one of the first things we check during our video inspection.
For Attleboro’s conditions—year-round HVAC cycling, elevated basement humidity near the Ten Mile River, and retrofit ductwork with unsealed joints—we recommend every 3–5 years for most homes. Homes with allergy sufferers, multiple pets, or recent renovations may need more frequent service. Call (888) 597-5659 and we’ll assess your specific Lennox system and usage patterns.
Service Areas Near Attleboro
We serve Attleboro homeowners throughout 02703 and surrounding communities including Plainville, Mansfield, North Attleborough, Seekonk, and Norton. We also travel to Worcester, Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, Lowell, and Springfield for larger residential projects and commercial duct systems.
Book Your Lennox Service in Attleboro Today
Scott handles every job personally. Same-day appointments are often available for Attleboro calls. We’ll inspect your Lennox system with video, explain exactly what we’re seeing, and quote before any work begins. No rotating crews, no surprises—just 11 years of focused expertise and 617 verified reviews saying we do what we say we’ll do.
Call (888) 597-5659 now for your free estimate.
Written by Scott Gray, Owner at Everest Air Duct Cleaning Service Massachusetts, serving Attleboro and Massachusetts since 2013.