Built to Handle Pueblo's Extremes
Trane doesn't just test their equipment to meet minimum standards — they test it beyond what most systems will ever face in real-world conditions. Their torture test process subjects units to extreme heat, cold, humidity, and dust before a single unit ships from the factory. For a place like Pueblo, where summer afternoons push past 100°F and winter wind chills can hit -20°F, that kind of over-engineering isn't excessive. It's practical.
The thing about Pueblo's climate that catches a lot of homeowners off guard is the speed of temperature changes. You can wake up to frost on the ground and be running your air conditioner by 2 PM. Trane's variable-speed systems handle these swings better than single-stage equipment because they adjust output continuously rather than cycling between full power and off. The XV20i heat pump, for example, can operate at as little as 25% capacity on a mild afternoon and ramp to 100% when temperatures drop at night.
We've been working on Trane systems throughout Pueblo County for over 20 years. Our technicians carry Trane-specific diagnostic tools and maintain direct access to Trane's technical support line. When we run into an unusual issue — which does happen with older installations that were sized or configured for different conditions — we can get answers quickly.