Dayton Daily News

McAfee’s 2 new trucks add to air duct-cleaning fleet

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

KETTERING— Greg McAfee started his heating, air conditioni­ng and ventilatio­n company with $274 and a used truck.

Some 30years later, he has purchased two new trucks solely for air duct cleaning services, investing nearly $250,000 total.

Growth has been McAfee story for a while. About three years ago, he bought a building originally built for Miami Computer Supply store at 4750 Hempstead Station Drive. McAfee basically moved next door, tripling his square footageand allowing him to consolidat­e a number of func

tions under one roof — warehousin­g, training and custom sheet metal work.

The business has 45 employees today. By far, most of what McAfee does — 95 percent, in fact — is residentia­l work, installati­on and repairs, including air duct cleaning. He still has a sheet metal shop in house for custom duct work, for himself and other area companies.

“I’d still be in a garage if I didn’t have a strong team,” McAfee said.

McAfee started his business in 1990, and he added air duct cleaning as a service just three years later. The move made sense because customers started asking about the service.

“We were having several calls for air duct cleaning, and we didn’t do it,” McAfee recalled.

He found a used air duct cleaning truck out of state and refurbishe­d it.

The idea isn’t complicate­d. The average home today can build up two to three pounds a year of dust in the duct work, McAfee said. “A lot of it you’re not going to see from the original register, but on down in near the trunk line where it actually settles, it can be inches thick of dust.”

So far this year, business is up. Privately held McAfee says revenue is up 15 percent from last year. “And last year was a good year,” he noted.

He attributes growth to active foundation and community work, steady marketing and spending about six to eight percent of gross revenue into advertisin­g into TV and radio.

And profits are always invested back into the business, he said.

“All my profits are reinvested,” McAfee said. “That’s why I can write a check for two trucks.”

He has an acronym for what he says people are breathing when they buy a home — “OPD” or “other people’s dust.”

McAfee recommends the duct-cleaning service — which costs an average of about $400 — every three to five years. When the approximat­ely four-hour job is completed, air flow should be improved, he said.

Since 1993, the company has probably gone through half a dozen air duct service trucks.

The new trucks are Pringle-brand gas-powered trucks, made in Ohio. (Pringle Co. is based in Malinta, Ohio.)

Many younger guys can’t drive standard-shift, so these new trucks offer automatic transmissi­ons, McAfee said.

“We actually have to have classes on how to drive a standard shift before we can put someone in other trucks,” he said. “These are automatics.”

The company started out serving customers within a 15-mile radius in the early 1990s. Today, McAfee serves a 25-mile radius, and he said expanding to a 30-mile radius is under careful considerat­ion.

Nationally, growth is expected in the HVAC industry. The number of heating, air conditioni­ng, and refrigerat­ion mechanics and installers is expected to grow by 15 percent by 2026, according to the Department of Labor. The 2018 median pay for the industry was $22.89 per hour or $47,610 a year.

 ?? THOMAS GNAU / STAFF ?? Greg McAfee, founder of Kettering’s McAfee Heating & Air, recently invested about $250,000 into a pair of trucks for residentia­l air duct-cleaning services.
THOMAS GNAU / STAFF Greg McAfee, founder of Kettering’s McAfee Heating & Air, recently invested about $250,000 into a pair of trucks for residentia­l air duct-cleaning services.
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McAfee

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