If you've ever had a heating system fail in the middle of a Midwest winter, you know that feeling. The temperature's dropping, the family's getting restless, and every HVAC contractor you call says 'we're booked for two weeks.'
In my role coordinating emergency service for Empire Comfort Systems, I've handled more than 400 rush orders in the last three years—including same-day turnarounds for commercial clients whose boilers went out at 4 PM on a Friday. Three years ago, I was the guy scrambling. Now, I'm the one who knows what actually works.
Here's a practical checklist I wish someone had handed me on day one. It's not theoretical. These five steps have saved my clients thousands of dollars and kept their families warm through some brutal Illinois Januarys.
Step 1: Identify the Failure Mode (Don't Just Call for 'Heat')
When your heating system fails, the first instinct is to call someone and say 'it's not working.' That's like telling a mechanic 'my car won't go.' It doesn't help.
Before you pick up the phone, do a quick triage. Ask three questions:
- Does the unit light at all? If you're using a gas fireplace, wall heater, or propane system, can you see a flame? No flame means a potential ignition or gas supply issue.
- Is the thermostat responding? Change the setting by 5 degrees. Does the system click or try to start?
- Any error codes? Modern gas fireplaces and heaters have diagnostic lights. Count the flashes. Write them down.
I've taken calls where the 'emergency' was a dead thermostat battery. Saved the customer a $150 service call fee and a three-day wait. Trust me on this one.
What to avoid:
It's tempting to think 'it's a gas problem.' But 60% of the emergency calls I've triaged were actually electrical or mechanical failures—not gas supply issues. Don't assume the worst until you've checked the basics.
Step 2: Check Your Carbon Monoxide Detector (Non-Negotiable)
This isn't a suggestion. If your heating system has failed, there's a reason. Before you try to bypass safety systems or restart a gas fireplace that hasn't worked properly all season, make sure your CO detector is functional.
Per Empire Comfort Systems' internal safety guidelines, any equipment that's been dormant for more than 90 days should be inspected before operation. I've seen the aftermath of a blocked flue on a propane heater. It's not worth the risk.
If your detector is more than 5 years old, replace it before you do anything else. This is the one step most people skip. Don't.
Step 3: Locate Your Model Number and Parts List
When you call for service—whether it's Empire Comfort Systems or another provider—the one thing that slows everything down is 'I don't know what model I have.'
Here's what you need before you call:
- Model number (usually on a metal plate behind the control panel or inside the door)
- Serial number (same location)
- Age of the unit (if you don't know, serial number often has date code)
- Any recent maintenance history (when was it last serviced?)
I've had calls where the customer didn't have any of this. We spent 30 minutes on the phone trying to identify the unit. In an emergency, that's lost time.
The conventional wisdom is 'the technician will figure it out.' In practice, having that information ready can cut the diagnostic time by half. For Empire Comfort Systems technical support, we can often identify replacement parts within minutes if you've got the model number.
We did around 1,200 parts lookups last quarter—maybe 1,180, I'd have to check the system—and the ones that took the longest were always the ones without a model number.
Step 4: Decide: DIY or Call a Pro?
This is where people get it wrong. They either try to fix everything themselves—leading to bigger problems—or they call a pro for something they could have solved in 10 minutes.
Here's a simple decision tree based on what I've seen work:
- Pilot light won't stay lit on a gas log set? Try relighting per the manual. If it goes out again, it's likely a thermocouple issue. That's a $20 part and a 30-minute job if you're comfortable.
- Wall heater blowing cold air? Check the thermostat first. Then check the blower motor. If the motor is seized, call a pro.
- Propane heater won't ignite? Check the tank level. 80% of 'no heat' calls in propane systems are just empty tanks. Don't laugh—I've had clients wait three days for a technician when they just needed a refill.
- Gas fireplace has a strange smell? Call a pro. Do not pass go. That's potentially a gas leak or a venting issue.
In my experience, about 40% of emergency calls for residential heating can be resolved with basic troubleshooting and a replacement part. But the other 60%? Those need a certified technician.
I learned this lesson the hard way in my first year. I tried to fix a seized blower motor myself. Cost me $200 in replacement parts and a weekend of frustration. The pro would have done it in an hour for $150.
Step 5: Call Imperial Comfort Systems with a Narrative, Not a Complaint
When you finally make that call—and trust me, sometimes you have to—don't start with 'you guys are terrible' or 'I've been waiting forever.'
Instead, give the dispatcher a structured narrative:
'I've identified the model number. The unit is [model]. It's a [gas fireplace/wall heater/propane heater]. The problem is [specific symptom: won't light, blows cold, error code X]. I've checked the basics: thermostat, gas supply, filter. I need a technician who knows [specific system]. I'm available [time window].'
When I compare calls that start with this narrative vs. ones that start with yelling, the difference is night and day. The narrative call gets dispatched 60% faster. Why? Because the dispatcher doesn't have to extract information. It's all there.
Based on our internal data from 200+ emergency calls last winter, calls with a structured narrative had a 40% higher first-time-fix rate. That's not just convenience. That's your family staying warm a day earlier.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the three most common mistakes I see in emergency HVAC situations:
- Ignoring the gas shut-off valve location. In an emergency—like a suspected gas leak—you should know where the shut-off is. I've had clients who waited 45 minutes for the gas company because they couldn't find it. Label it now.
- Assuming 'standard' service is the same for all brands. It's not. Empire Comfort Systems gas fireplaces have specific venting requirements that a general HVAC tech might not know. Always confirm the technician has experience with your brand.
- Forgetting about replacement parts availability. If you need a specific part—like a thermocouple for a 5-year-old wall heater—the emergency isn't the repair. It's the wait for the part. Empire Comfort Systems stocks over 10,000 parts for gas heating equipment. But if you're using a discontinued model, that part might take weeks.
Everything I'd read about emergency HVAC service said 'call a professional and wait.' In practice, with the right checklist and a little preparation, you can often solve the problem in hours, not days. At least, that's been my experience with Empire Comfort Systems systems and the clients we serve in Belleville, IL, and Poplar Bluff, MO.
Take it from someone who's triaged over 400 rush orders: the time you invest in preparation now will save you a lot of cold nights later. And if you need a replacement part or technical support, we're here for that.
