HVAC Emergency Oklahoma: When Heat or AC Fails

Your furnace dies at 11 PM in January. Your AC quits on a 105‑degree afternoon in July. Both happen more than you’d think — and knowing what to do in the first 30 minutes can protect your home, your family, and your equipment while help is on the way.

Hartzell’s Heat & Air fleet — two service vans ready for dispatch
Hartzell’s responds to HVAC emergencies in Kingfisher and central Oklahoma. Call 405-375-4822.

Step 1: Don’t Panic — Check the Simple Things First

Before calling for emergency HVAC service, work through this quick checklist. A surprising number of “emergencies” are resolved in two minutes:

  • Check the thermostat. Is it set to heat or cool? Is the fan set to Auto, not On? Did the batteries die?
  • Check the breaker panel. HVAC systems have a dedicated 240V breaker. If it’s tripped, reset it once. If it trips again immediately, stop — that signals a short and needs a tech.
  • Check the filter. A completely clogged filter can cause a furnace to overheat and shut off on a safety limit. Pull it and run the system without it temporarily to see if it starts.
  • Check the condensate drain line (AC only). A plugged drain triggers a float switch that shuts the system off. If water is pooling near the air handler, this is likely your problem.
  • Check the outdoor disconnect. The weather-resistant box next to your outdoor unit has a pull-out fuse block. Make sure it’s fully seated.

If It’s Your Furnace: Heating Emergency Steps

If you smell gas — leave immediately. Don’t flip switches. Don’t use your phone inside. Get out, call 911 and ONG/Oklahoma Natural Gas from outside or a neighbor’s home.

If there’s no gas smell but no heat:

  • Set the thermostat 5 degrees above room temperature and wait 3–5 minutes for the system to attempt a startup cycle
  • Listen for the igniter clicking (gas furnace) or the blower starting (heat pump)
  • If the system attempts to start but shuts off quickly, it’s likely a safety lockout — don’t keep manually resetting it
  • Use electric space heaters for bedrooms — keep doors closed to retain heat
  • Know your home’s freeze risk: pipes in exterior walls and crawlspaces can freeze when interior temps drop below 50°F

If It’s Your AC: Cooling Emergency Steps

Oklahoma summers are dangerous. Heat exhaustion can occur indoors when temps exceed 90°F, especially for elderly residents and young children.

  • Close blinds and curtains on south and west-facing windows — this alone can drop indoor temp 5–10 degrees
  • Run ceiling fans counterclockwise (downward airflow) — fans don’t cool air but reduce perceived heat by 4–6 degrees
  • Turn off heat-generating appliances — ovens, dishwashers, dryers
  • If the outdoor unit is running but blowing warm air, check whether the outdoor coil is iced over — turn the system to Fan Only for 30–60 minutes to let ice melt before calling
  • If temps become dangerous, leave for a cooled space (library, family, hotel) while waiting for service

What to Tell the Technician When You Call

The more information you can provide, the faster the diagnosis. Have ready:

  • Brand and approximate age of the system (check the data plate on the unit — manufacture date is encoded in the serial number)
  • What the system is doing: nothing at all, starting then stopping, running but not heating/cooling, making a new noise
  • Any recent changes: new filter, power outage, recent repairs, anything unusual before it stopped
  • Whether you’ve reset the breaker or thermostat and what happened

Hartzell’s Emergency HVAC Service in Central Oklahoma

Hartzell’s Heat & Air provides emergency HVAC service for heating and cooling failures throughout central Oklahoma — Kingfisher, Garfield County, Canadian County, Logan County, and surrounding areas. We prioritize no-heat calls during cold weather.

HVAC Emergency? Call Hartzell’s

Serving Kingfisher and central Oklahoma

405-375-4822


Frequently Asked Questions

Does Hartzell’s charge extra for after-hours emergency calls?

The standard $99 dispatch fee applies to all service calls. After-hours emergency service is available — call 405-375-4822 for current availability and scheduling.

My furnace igniter keeps clicking but won’t light — is that dangerous?

Repeated ignition attempts without lighting are a sign the gas valve, igniter, or flame sensor needs service — not dangerous if there’s no smell of gas, but don’t keep manually restarting it. Call for a diagnostic.

How cold does it need to get before pipes freeze inside an Oklahoma home?

Pipes in exterior walls or unconditioned spaces can begin freezing when exterior temps drop below 20°F for more than a few hours and interior temps fall below 50°F. During a no-heat emergency in winter, prioritize keeping at least one area of the home above 55°F.

Questions? Ready to Schedule?

Call 405-375-4822 or book online. Same-day appointments often available. Free estimates on new systems.

Related Services from Hartzell’s Heat & Air

Written by Dave Hartzell — Owner, Hartzell’s Heat & Air. Master HVAC License #00115936. Serving central Oklahoma for 15+ years.

Scroll to Top