Should I Repair
or Replace Old Equipment?
Three main factors to consider are:
Life expectancy
Operating cost
Looking at the big picture
Life Expectancy of Current System
When you’re frustrated with an equipment break-down,
it can be tempting to find the least expensive "quick
fix" to get on with your life in relative comfort.
That "quick fix" may be the least expensive
now, but it may not give you the most value — or cost
you the least — in the long run.
Paying for repairs to an old or inefficient system often
simply prolongs the inevitable. It’s almost like putting
a bandage on a serious injury. An older system that breaks
down once is likely to break down again ... and again.
That means more emergency service calls or, worse yet,
the risk of damage to your home or to other components
of your heating and cooling system.
Operating Cost
There’s also an ongoing cost factor to consider. Restoring
your old system will only bring it back to its current
level of energy efficiency. After you’ve recovered from
the repair bills and the frustration of system breakdowns,
you still won’t save on your energy bills.
Even six-year-old heat pumps and air conditioners are
considered grossly inefficient by today’s energy efficiency
standards. So are most furnaces built before 1980. So
you could save up to 60% on your energy bills with new
high-efficiency equipment. That’s why installing a new
heating and cooling system can actually pay for itself
in energy savings within a relatively short time.
Looking at the Big Picture
When one component of your system breaks down unexpectedly,
it’s easy to just focus on repairing or replacing that
component. But each part of your system works with the
others to boost efficiency and reliability, so it helps
to keep the big picture in mind.
Replacing your old furnace with a new higher-efficiency
model but leaving your old mechanical thermostat in place,
for example, won’t allow you to enjoy all the efficiency
advantages the furnace has to offer. Likewise, if you
install a new furnace but don’t get a humidifier, the
air may seem cooler, forcing you to operate your new system
at a higher temperature to be comfortable. Plus, you can
often save on installation costs if you have several components
of your system (for example, a furnace and an air conditioner)
replaced at the same time.