A central air conditioning installation is a 15–20 year commitment to a piece of mechanical equipment that will run thousands of hours in conditions your home’s envelope, elevation, and sun exposure create — not the conditions described in a manufacturer’s marketing brochure. Getting that installation right requires three things most HVAC contractors in the south Salt Lake Valley skip: a documented load calculation, an elevation-corrected equipment selection, and a vacuum-verified, charge-measured startup that confirms the system is operating to specification before the crew leaves your driveway.
Draper Heating & Air Conditioning installs central air conditioning systems for residential and light-commercial properties across Draper, Sandy, Bluffdale, Riverton, South Jordan, and Herriman. Every installation is performed by our W-2 employee crews under Utah DOPL HVAC contractor license #11487612-5501, with a building permit pulled through the applicable municipal building department before work begins.
We do not size air conditioning systems by square footage. The rule of thumb — 400 to 600 square feet per ton of cooling capacity — was developed as a quick field estimate in the 1960s and has no engineering basis for accurately predicting the cooling load of a specific home in a specific climate. A 2,400 square foot home in old-town Draper with original 1978 single-pane aluminum windows and no attic insulation has a cooling load two to three times higher than a 2,400 square foot home in Daybreak with triple-pane fiberglass windows, R-49 blown-in attic insulation, and a north-facing roof slope. Sizing both homes at “4 tons because that’s what fits the square footage” gets one of those homes dramatically wrong.
Every AC installation we quote begins with an ACCA Manual J residential load calculation. The inputs we collect and measure on-site:
The Manual J output gives us the calculated cooling load in BTU/hr for the entire home and by zone if the home has multiple air handling systems. That number drives every equipment decision downstream.
Manual S governs how we match equipment to the load. The rules are specific: the selected equipment’s sensible cooling capacity must not exceed 115% of the calculated sensible load, and the total capacity must not exceed 125% of the total load at the design outdoor conditions. Those limits exist because oversized equipment short-cycles — it reaches setpoint too quickly, shuts off before the coil has time to remove latent heat (humidity), and restarts again minutes later. The result is a home that is cold but clammy in the summer, with elevated humidity driving mold risk in finished basements and uncomfortable conditions despite low thermostat setpoints.
For SunCrest and Traverse Ridge installations, Manual S selection also applies the manufacturer’s altitude correction factor to the equipment’s published capacity at the actual installation elevation. A condenser with a published 36,000 BTU total capacity at sea level is delivering approximately 30,600 BTU at 6,200 feet after applying the standard 3–4% per 1,000 foot correction. We use the altitude-corrected capacity in our Manual S selection, not the sea-level nameplate.
If the existing duct system is staying, we run a Manual D verification to confirm it can deliver the new system’s required airflow to each zone. A duct system designed for a 3-ton unit may not adequately deliver the airflow a 3.5-ton replacement requires — or it may be oversized, meaning a 2.5-ton unit that more accurately matches the load can be used, reducing first cost and improving part-load efficiency. We identify duct modifications required before the equipment is ordered, so they are included in the installation quote rather than discovered as extras after the equipment arrives.
For new AC installations in the south Salt Lake Valley, our primary equipment lines are:
Carrier’s Infinity series (24VNA6 variable-capacity, 24ACC0 two-stage) with the Infinity communicating system provides the most precise capacity modulation for south Salt Lake Valley cooling loads, which swing between early morning mild conditions and peak afternoon heat. The 24VNA6’s variable-speed compressor turns down to 25% capacity on mild days, providing better humidity control and lower runtime energy consumption than single-stage equipment that runs at 100% or nothing. AHRI-certified system efficiencies reach 26 SEER2 when paired with a matched Carrier air handler. R-454B refrigerant on all 2025 and later production.
Trane’s XV series (XV21i variable-capacity, XR15 and XR17 standard efficiency) with the ComfortLink II communicating thermostat. Trane equipment is built to tight manufacturing tolerances and performs well in the south valley’s high-dust return air conditions, which accelerate coil fouling on units with less robust coil fin construction. The XV21i’s variable-speed scroll compressor is well-suited to Draper’s diurnal temperature swing — 40°F to 96°F in the same day during peak summer is not unusual, and a variable-capacity unit handles that range better than a single-stage unit cycling on and off.
Lennox XC21 variable-capacity and XC16 two-stage condensers for applications where the iComfort S30 communicating thermostat’s advanced scheduling and remote monitoring capabilities are a homeowner priority. The XC21 is a premium product with premium installation sensitivity — charge must be set within ±2°F subcooling of target and the system must be commissioned on the iComfort S30 platform to realize the rated efficiency. We complete the full Lennox commissioning protocol on every XC21 installation.
For homes without existing ductwork, additions, finished basements, or multi-zone applications where the existing ducted system cannot adequately serve a new space, Mitsubishi M-Series and MXZ multi-zone ductless systems provide precise zone-by-zone cooling without the duct losses of extended flex run systems. Mitsubishi Diamond Contractor installation activates the 12-year parts and compressor warranty. R-454B compliant on 2025 and later production.
For homeowners evaluating total cost of ownership over a 15–20 year horizon, Daikin’s DX17VSS variable-capacity inverter condenser and Bosch’s IDS Premium 2.0 with BVA air handler offer competitive efficiency ratings with manufacturer warranty terms (Daikin 12-year registered, Bosch 10-year registered) and strong factory support through Utah-based distributors.
Qualifying AC and heat pump installations in 2026 may be eligible for:
We document rebate eligibility during your estimate and provide the AHRI certification number, manufacturer specification sheet, and installer license documentation required for filing. We do not inflate installation prices to offset rebate amounts — the rebate is yours, not a discount mechanism for our pricing.
Free in-home estimates for new AC installations across Draper, Sandy, Bluffdale, Riverton, South Jordan, and Herriman. We bring a load calculation, not a price sheet.