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Salt Lake City Weather Swings & Thermostat Tips
Stop Fighting Your Thermostat: How to Handle Salt Lake City’s Wild Weather Swings Like a Pro If you’ve lived along the Wasatch Front for any length of time, you already know the drill. It’s a crisp 42°F Monday morning in Murray. By Wednesday, it’s pushing 78°F in Draper. Then a
Should You Upgrade to A Dual-Zone A/C System?
Should You Upgrade to a Dual-Zone AC System? What Northern Utah Homeowners Need to Know Before Summer If you’ve ever had one person in your house cranking the thermostat up while someone else is dying of heat in another room, you already understand the core problem with a single-zone AC
Summer Home Maintenance Checklist
Don’t Wait for a Breakdown: Your Northern Utah Summer Home Maintenance Checklist Summer in Northern Utah moves fast. One week you’re still wearing a jacket in the Wasatch Front valleys, and the next you’re staring down 95-degree heat wondering why your AC sounds like a dying lawnmower. That’s not an
Don’t Ignore Hidden Electrical Hazards This Spring: Why a Spring Electrical Safety Mini-Inspection Matters in Northern Utah
Spring in Northern Utah means longer days, home projects, and getting your house ready for warmer weather. But as homeowners in the Salt Lake City area start using outdoor outlets, garage tools, and seasonal appliances again, hidden electrical issues often go unnoticed, until they cause a serious problem. Loose connections,
Fight Spring Allergies with HVAC
Stop Suffering Through Spring: How Your HVAC System Can Actually Fight Allergies For You in Salt Lake City Spring in Northern Utah is beautiful. It’s also absolutely brutal if you’re one of the millions of people whose immune system treats pollen like a personal attack. The Wasatch Front gets hammered
How to Improve Indoor Air Quality in Your Home (Before Spring Makes It Worse)
If your home feels stale, dusty, or uncomfortable during these late winter months, it’s not just the mountain breeze. In many Utah homes, it’s a sign of poor indoor air quality—a problem that often goes unnoticed until the “inversion” haze clears, or the spring tree pollen arrives. Here along the Wasatch Front, airborne hitchhikers can enter your