SolvedHeating Repair
Repair or replace a 11-year-old furnace in London?
Asked by Michelle Pricein London, England· 3/1/2026· 1840 views
I'm in London, England and dealing with a 11-year-old furnace in our townhouse. Over the past few service calls, it has been short cycling every few minutes and we're now noticing our energy use jumped before the comfort issue became obvious.
One contractor quoted GBP 2,092 for repair, while another jumped straight to a GBP 9,306 replacement because of the age. The weather here has been dealing us older housing stock with mixed insulation, so I do not want to wait too long, but I also do not want to approve the wrong scope.
If you were comparing bids on this, what would you want checked first? I especially want to know how much weight you would give to static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration.
heatingtroubleshootingrepair
9 Answers
53
✓ Accepted Answer
The price range alone does not tell you enough. Ask what was tested, what failed, and which assumptions are built into the quote. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
30
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The recommendation should be tied to measurements, not just the age of the equipment. Age matters, but it is not a diagnosis on its own. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
21
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The price range alone does not tell you enough. Ask what was tested, what failed, and which assumptions are built into the quote. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
14
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The recommendation should be tied to measurements, not just the age of the equipment. Age matters, but it is not a diagnosis on its own. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
9
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If you can, ask whether they checked airflow before recommending equipment. We nearly replaced a system when the bigger issue was elsewhere. We had a related issue with our furnace in London. Once we forced every quote into the same format, the decision got much easier because the weak recommendations stood out immediately.
Aria Brooks·3/1/2026
7
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If this landed on my schedule, I would want to document the core readings first and then explain exactly why the repair does or does not make economic sense. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
6
0
The recommendation should be tied to measurements, not just the age of the equipment. Age matters, but it is not a diagnosis on its own. For a furnace that is short cycling every few minutes, the first things I would ask for are static pressure, filter restriction, flame sensor condition, and thermostat calibration. If the contractor is recommending bigger work, ask them to explain which measurement supports that recommendation and whether they ruled out airflow or controls first. In London, England, pricing can move around, but the diagnostic process should still be clear.
2
0
If you can, ask whether they checked airflow before recommending equipment. We nearly replaced a system when the bigger issue was elsewhere. We had a related issue with our furnace in London. Once we forced every quote into the same format, the decision got much easier because the weak recommendations stood out immediately.
Samantha Singh·3/2/2026
1
0
We used the directory reviews to filter out firms that were vague about what they had actually tested. That saved us a lot of time. We had a related issue with our furnace in London. Once we forced every quote into the same format, the decision got much easier because the weak recommendations stood out immediately.
Ethan Price·3/1/2026