Air Conditioning Cold Flow Promo

Aspen Mountain Plumbing
June 2, 2026

Aspen Mountain Plumbing's Cold Flow gives Sweetwater County homeowners measured, photographed proof their AC is ready for summer.

The first real heat of a Sweetwater County summer is right around the corner. On behalf of the entire team at Aspen Mountain Plumbing, we would like to congratulate all Sweetwater County residents on surviving another Wyoming winter. But now, it's the moment of truth.

The house won't cool down, the unit outside running hot and loud and accomplishing nothing, the call to a contractor who can't come until Thursday. By then the reward for every "tune-up" you ever paid for is the same reward prevention always pays - nothing. No proof it was ever ready. No way to know what went wrong, or whether anyone really looked.

Aspen Mountain Plumbing built Cold Flow to end that guessing. It's a seasonal AC readiness evaluation with one visit, one flat price, and one clear cooling solution checklist. The technician measures, photographs, and documents every step, then hands you a timestamped photo report: numbered photos, plain captions, the actual readings. Proof you can hold, before the heat does the testing for you.

Because the reward for being ready is a July afternoon where nothing happens. Cold Flow is how you finally get to see it.

The $350 Air Conditioning Service That Bring Cold Air Solutions To Your Home

Aspen Mountain Plumbing's Cold Flow Air Conditioning Promo in Sweetwater County Wyoming
Aspen Mountain Plumbing's Cold Flow Air Conditioning Promo in Sweetwater County Wyoming

For a flat $350, Cold Flow turns the question "is my AC ready for summer?" from a worry into a document. One Aspen Mountain technician arrives, works through the whole system - thermostat, vents, filter, indoor blower, outdoor unit - and measures the one number that actually answers it: how cold the air coming from your vents really is. Every step is photographed and written down, then handed back to you as a timestamped report you keep. No upsell waiting at the end, no second visit to schedule, no "looks good" you're supposed to take on faith. Just one visit, one price, and cold-air proof you can hold in your hand before the first ninety-degree afternoon arrives to test it for you.

The Outdoor Air Conditioning Unit Service

The Outdoor Air Conditioning Unit Service
The Outdoor Air Conditioning Unit Service

The outdoor unit sits against your house and runs all summer, but it's the part you never actually look at. The outdoor service documents all of it while it's running: the fan, the electrical components, the model and refrigerant information on the tag, and the condition of the insulation on the lines. Every piece comes back as numbered photos in your report, your equipment, on the record, photographed and dated. The model and refrigerant details are written down before you'd ever need them in a pinch, and anything starting to wear shows up in a dated photo instead of a verbal "keep an eye on that."

Of everything that keeps your house cool, the outdoor unit works the hardest and gets looked at the least. It runs through every hot stretch of the summer, exposed to weather, dust, and whatever the yard throws at it, while the homeowner has no real reason to walk around back and check on it. But what happens on the day it decides to stop working? That's what makes it worth documenting on purpose: it's the part most likely to be quietly wearing down in plain sight, and the part you'd otherwise only meet during an emergency. The outdoor service is a chance to see it working before summer demands it, rather than meeting it for the first time the afternoon it stops.

The Air Conditioning's Electrical Components Service

The Air Conditioning's Electrical Components Service
The Air Conditioning's Electrical Components Service

The electrical components are what tell your air conditioner to run and keep it running safely, but they're sealed away where you'd never check them. The electrical service documents them while the system is live: the connections, the controls, and the parts that switch the unit on and carry the load through a full summer of cycling.

The Air Conditioning's Condenser Fan Service

The Air Conditioning's Condenser Fan Service
The Air Conditioning's Condenser Fan Service

The condenser fan is the part of the outdoor unit that pulls heat out of your home and pushes it into the air, but it spins out of sight where you'd never watch it work. The condenser fan service documents it while it's running: the blade, the motor, and the way it's turning under load.

Electrical parts don't usually fail all at once. A connection works loose over a season, a contact wears a little each time the system cycles on, and for a while everything still runs — until one hot afternoon when the load is highest and the weak point finally gives. That's what makes the electrical side worth looking at before summer rather than during it: these are the parts that tend to warn you quietly, if anyone's actually looking, and the parts most likely to leave you without cooling on the exact day you need it most. The electrical service is a look at them while the system is running normally, when there's still time to catch the wear instead of meeting it in a breakdown.

Your AC Filter Service

Your AC Filter Service
Your AC Filter Service

The filter is the one part of your system you're actually supposed to change yourself, but it's easy to lose track of what shape it's in or what size it even takes. The filter service checks it, photographs its condition, and writes down the exact sizes.

There's nothing worse and more dangerous than a clogged AC filter. It makes your whole system work harder to pull air through, runs up the strain on everything downstream, and quietly drags down how well the house actually cools. The hard part was never changing it; it's knowing what shape it's in and what size to buy without dragging the old one to the store or guessing in the aisle. The filter service settles both at once. You walk away knowing the condition it's really in and the exact sizes you need, so the easiest maintenance in your house stops being the one you put off.

Cold Air Temperature Out of Vents - Air Conditioning Service

Cold Air Temperature Out of Vents - Air Conditioning Service

This is the test that answers the only question that really matters on a hot day: is your air conditioner actually putting out cold air? The vent-temperature service measures it directly. An Aspen Mountain Plumbing Air Conditioning technician takes the temperature of the air coming out of your supply vents and shows you exactly how cold it is. Not "it's running," not "looks good" but a real number you can see, the difference between a system that's truly cooling and one that's just moving warm air around the house. It's the single clearest sign your AC is ready for summer, measured and shown to you on the spot.

Everything else about your air conditioner can look right and still leave you hot. The unit can hum along, the fan can spin, the thermostat can read seventy-two, and the air landing in your rooms can still be warmer than it should be, for reasons you'd never spot by standing there listening to it run. That's why the number matters more than the impression: cold air at the vent is the one thing that can't be faked or talked around, the place where "it seems fine" either holds up or falls apart. The vent-temperature service goes straight to it, not how the system looks or sounds, but how cold it's actually delivering, which is the only part of the answer you can feel on a ninety-degree afternoon.

Full Air Conditioning Thermostat Service

Full Air Conditioning Thermostat Service
Full Air Conditioning Thermostat Service

The thermostat is where cooling actually starts. It's the part of the system you touch, and the part that has to get it right before anything else can. The thermostat service confirms it's set correctly and, more importantly, that it's truly telling the system to cool - not just lit up and looking right, but actually sending the command. A certified Aspen Mountain Plumbing Air Conditioning technician verifies the settings and the mode and makes sure the thermostat and the air conditioner are genuinely talking to each other. It's the first thing that has to be true for everything downstream to matter.

It's easy to assume the thermostat is fine because it lights up and shows a number, but looking right and working right aren't the same thing. A thermostat can display the temperature you set and still fail to pass the command along, and when that happens, the whole system sits idle while everything downstream gets blamed for a problem that started at the wall. That's why it's the first thing to confirm rather than the last: it's the cheapest, simplest point of failure in the entire system, and the one most likely to send a homeowner chasing an expensive problem that was never really there. The thermostat service rules it out at the source, so that when the rest of the check confirms the system is cooling, you know the command behind it is actually getting through.

Summer in Sweetwater County doesn't send a warning. One afternoon it's mild, the next it's ninety-five and your air conditioner is either ready or it isn't, and the worst time to learn the answer is the day it fails. Cold Flow exists so you never have to guess. One visit, one flat $350, and a timestamped photo report you keep: the actual temperature at your vents, your filter sizes, your outdoor unit, all measured, photographed, and handed back to you. No upsell waiting at the end. No second trip to schedule. No "looks good" you're asked to take on faith, just proof you can hold in your hand.

That's the whole idea behind Cold Flow: the reward for being ready is a July afternoon where nothing happens. Let us show you it's ready, before the heat does the testing for you.

Call Aspen Mountain Plumbing today to book your Cold Flow AC readiness check, and walk into summer knowing, not hoping.