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Carbon Monoxide Leak Detection in Chicago – Emergency Response Teams Dispatched Within 60 Minutes

Five Star HVAC Chicago deploys certified CO detection specialists to Chicago homes and businesses around the clock, using professional-grade gas analyzers to identify deadly carbon monoxide leaks before they threaten your family or employees.

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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Doesn't Wait for Business Hours

Carbon monoxide detectors screaming at 3 a.m. CO symptoms like dizziness, confusion, or unexplained headaches. The faint smell of exhaust in your basement. These are not problems you can ignore until morning.

Chicago's brutal winter cycle creates perfect conditions for carbon monoxide buildup. When temperatures drop below freezing for weeks, furnaces run constantly. Older heating systems in Wicker Park brownstones and Logan Square greystones work harder than they were designed to. Cracked heat exchangers, blocked venting, and backdrafting from negative pressure all become deadly risks when your system runs nonstop through January and February.

Carbon monoxide is called the silent killer for a reason. You cannot see it, smell it, or taste it. At low concentrations, it causes flu-like symptoms. At high concentrations, it causes unconsciousness and death within minutes. Every year, more than 400 Americans die from unintentional CO poisoning, and over 100,000 visit emergency rooms.

Emergency carbon monoxide testing is not something you schedule for next week. Professional CO leak inspection requires immediate dispatch, specialized equipment, and technicians trained to identify the source while your family or employees evacuate to safety. Urgent carbon monoxide check services exist because every minute counts when CO levels reach dangerous thresholds.

Five Star HVAC Chicago operates CO gas detection service teams 24 hours a day. We understand that carbon monoxide leak testing cannot wait for a callback or an appointment window. When you call, we respond.

Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Doesn't Wait for Business Hours
How Professional CO Detection Identifies Leak Sources Fast

How Professional CO Detection Identifies Leak Sources Fast

Carbon monoxide detection is not about waving a hardware store sensor around your basement. Professional CO leak inspection uses calibrated multi-gas analyzers that measure CO concentrations in parts per million. Our technicians test ambient air levels in every room, then systematically isolate the source.

The most common culprits are heating systems. Furnaces with cracked heat exchangers leak combustion gases directly into your ductwork. Blocked flue pipes cause exhaust to backdraft into living spaces instead of venting outside. Improperly sized or deteriorated venting allows CO to seep through gaps and joints.

Water heaters are another frequent source. Atmospheric draft water heaters depend on proper venting through chimneys or flue pipes. When those pathways become blocked by bird nests, ice dams, or debris, combustion gases spill into the mechanical room. Newer power-vented units can fail when PVC exhaust pipes crack or separate.

We also test attached garages, fireplaces, and any fossil-fuel-burning appliance. Gas ranges, dryers, and even portable generators used during power outages create CO. Our detection process involves measuring flue gas composition, checking draft pressure, inspecting heat exchangers with borescope cameras, and performing combustion analysis.

Once we identify the source, we provide clear options. Some leaks require immediate appliance shutdown and replacement. Others need burner adjustment, vent repair, or flue cleaning. We never restart an appliance until CO levels return to safe ambient readings and the root cause is eliminated.

You get a written report documenting CO levels, the leak source, and corrective actions taken. This documentation matters for insurance claims and future reference.

What Happens During Emergency CO Detection

Carbon Monoxide Leak Detection in Chicago – Emergency Response Teams Dispatched Within 60 Minutes
01

Immediate Dispatch and Safety Assessment

Our technician arrives with professional CO detection equipment and begins measuring ambient air levels throughout your property. If readings exceed safe thresholds, we advise immediate evacuation and contact emergency services. We shut down suspected appliances and open windows to ventilate the space. Your safety is established before diagnostic work begins. We work quickly because time matters in CO emergencies.
02

Source Isolation and Testing

Using calibrated gas analyzers, we test each fossil-fuel appliance individually. We measure flue gas composition, check draft pressure, and inspect heat exchangers and venting systems. We trace CO concentrations to the specific appliance or system failure causing the leak. This process involves combustion analysis, visual inspection of exhaust pathways, and pressure testing. We document findings with photos and meter readings for your records.
03

Repair, Verification, and Clearance

After identifying the source, we perform necessary repairs or recommend appliance replacement if the unit is beyond safe operation. We retest all areas to confirm CO levels have returned to safe ambient readings below 9 parts per million. We provide a written report detailing the leak source, corrective actions, and verification results. You receive clear documentation proving your environment is safe for reoccupancy before we leave your property.

Why Chicago Homeowners Trust Five Star HVAC for CO Emergencies

Chicago's housing stock presents unique carbon monoxide risks. Neighborhoods like Pilsen, Bridgeport, and Albany Park contain thousands of homes built between 1900 and 1950. These properties feature original boilers, gravity furnaces, and chimney systems that were never designed for modern efficiency standards or continuous operation.

When you call Five Star HVAC Chicago for emergency CO detection, you get technicians who understand how old cast iron boilers behave differently than modern condensing furnaces. We know how Chicago's clay tile flue liners crack after decades of freeze-thaw cycles. We understand how negative pressure from modern exhaust fans can cause atmospheric draft appliances to backdraft.

Our technicians carry professional-grade detection equipment, not consumer-level sensors. We use Bacharach and UEI combustion analyzers calibrated to measure CO in single-digit parts per million. This precision matters because exposure to even 35 PPM over several hours causes health effects.

We operate 24 hours a day because CO emergencies happen at night, on weekends, and during holidays when most companies are closed. Our dispatch system prioritizes CO calls above routine service. When you call with a suspected leak, you speak to a live person, not an answering service. That person dispatches a technician immediately.

Five Star HVAC Chicago has served Cook County since our founding. We maintain relationships with local building inspectors, work with Chicago's building code requirements, and understand the permit processes for furnace and boiler replacement. When we identify an appliance that must be replaced immediately, we can source equipment and complete installation without leaving you without heat.

You also get straight answers. If your furnace can be repaired safely, we repair it. If it cannot, we explain why and provide options. We do not upsell replacements when repairs are appropriate, and we do not minimize risks when appliances are unsafe.

What to Expect During Emergency CO Response

Response Time and Availability

Five Star HVAC Chicago dispatches emergency CO detection teams within 60 minutes of your call, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. We maintain on-call technicians specifically for urgent situations where safety is at risk. When you call, you speak to a dispatcher who understands the seriousness of carbon monoxide exposure. We prioritize CO calls above routine service requests. Our technicians arrive with fully stocked service vehicles containing professional detection equipment, replacement parts for common furnace and water heater components, and the tools needed to perform immediate repairs. You are not placed on a waiting list or scheduled for the next available appointment. CO emergencies receive immediate response because delays create real danger.

Initial Assessment and Diagnosis

Our technician begins by measuring ambient CO levels throughout your property using calibrated gas analyzers. We test every room, particularly sleeping areas and spaces near mechanical equipment. If levels exceed safe thresholds, we advise evacuation and ventilation before proceeding. We systematically test each fossil-fuel appliance, measuring flue gas composition, checking draft conditions, and inspecting heat exchangers and venting systems. We use borescope cameras to visually inspect heat exchanger surfaces for cracks invisible to the naked eye. We perform combustion analysis to evaluate burner efficiency and exhaust gas quality. This diagnostic process identifies not just whether CO is present, but where it originates and why the leak occurred. You receive clear explanations of findings during the inspection.

Repair Quality and Verification

After identifying the leak source, we perform repairs using manufacturer-approved parts and methods that meet Chicago building code requirements. Common repairs include replacing cracked heat exchangers, resealing flue pipe connections, cleaning blocked venting, adjusting burner combustion, or replacing failed pressure switches and inducer motors. When appliances are beyond safe repair, we provide options for immediate replacement. We never restart an appliance until post-repair testing confirms CO levels have returned to safe ambient readings. We retest all areas and provide written verification of safe CO levels before considering the job complete. You receive documentation including before and after meter readings, photos of identified problems, and a detailed explanation of corrective actions taken. This record proves your environment is safe for reoccupancy.

Follow-Up and Prevention Planning

After resolving the immediate CO hazard, we provide recommendations for preventing future incidents. This includes discussing proper CO detector placement, explaining maintenance schedules for your heating system, and identifying other potential CO sources in your home. We recommend annual furnace inspections before heating season and combustion analysis as part of routine maintenance. If your appliance is aging or showing signs of deterioration, we discuss replacement options before you face another emergency. We also provide information about recognizing early warning signs of combustion problems, such as sooting, yellow flames instead of blue, or excessive condensation near appliances. You can schedule follow-up maintenance or inspection services at any time. Our service records remain on file so future technicians have access to your equipment history and past repairs.

Frequently Asked Questions

You Have Questions,
We Have Answers

How do you know if carbon monoxide is leaking? +

You cannot see, smell, or taste carbon monoxide. The only way to know if CO is leaking is with a working detector. Physical symptoms include headache, dizziness, nausea, confusion, and fatigue. If your detector alarms, evacuate immediately and call 911. Chicago winters mean furnaces and boilers run hard, increasing risk. Check yellow or flickering pilot lights, excess moisture on windows, and soot buildup around appliances. These signal incomplete combustion. Do not ignore detector chirps or physical symptoms. Get out, get fresh air, and call for help. Speed saves lives.

What's the most common household thing to cause a carbon monoxide leak? +

Furnaces cause most household carbon monoxide leaks in Chicago. Cracked heat exchangers, blocked vents, and poor combustion allow CO to escape into living spaces. Older furnaces in Chicago bungalows and two-flats are vulnerable to freeze-thaw damage and corrosion. Gas water heaters rank second, especially units in basements with inadequate ventilation. Gas stoves, clothes dryers, and fireplaces also produce CO if venting fails. Chicago's aging housing stock increases risk. Schedule annual furnace inspections before heating season. A cracked exchanger is a silent killer. Replace old equipment before it fails.

What are two warning signs of carbon monoxide in a house? +

Two warning signs: your carbon monoxide detector alarms, and you or family members feel sick with flu-like symptoms that improve when you leave the house. Headaches, dizziness, weakness, nausea, and confusion are red flags. If multiple people feel sick at once, suspect CO. Chicago residents often mistake winter CO exposure for colds or flu. Look for physical clues too: yellow or flickering furnace flames instead of blue, soot around appliances, excess condensation on windows. If your detector sounds, trust it. Evacuate immediately. Do not investigate. Call 911 from outside.

Should a carbon monoxide detector be placed high or low? +

Place carbon monoxide detectors at breathing level, about five feet high on walls, or on ceilings. CO mixes evenly with air, so height matters less than proximity to sleeping areas. Install one on every level of your Chicago home, including the basement. Put detectors near bedrooms so you hear alarms while sleeping. Avoid placing them in kitchens, bathrooms, or near furnaces where humidity and normal combustion gases cause false alarms. Wall-mounted units work well in Chicago homes with baseboard heat. Test monthly. Replace batteries twice yearly. Replace the entire unit every seven years.

How long can you live in a house with a carbon monoxide leak? +

You cannot safely live in a house with a carbon monoxide leak. Even low-level exposure causes brain damage, organ failure, and death. Duration depends on concentration. High levels kill in minutes. Lower levels cause chronic poisoning over days or weeks. Chicago's tight, weatherized homes trap CO faster than drafty older buildings. If you suspect a leak, evacuate immediately. Do not try to ventilate or find the source. Call 911 and your gas utility from outside. Do not re-enter until fire crews clear the home and a technician repairs the leak. Your life depends on speed.

Can you test carbon monoxide with your phone? +

No reliable smartphone app detects carbon monoxide. Some devices claim to use phone sensors, but they do not work. CO requires dedicated electrochemical sensors found only in proper detectors. Do not trust your phone. Install UL-listed carbon monoxide detectors on every level of your Chicago home. Some smart home systems integrate with professional-grade detectors and alert your phone when alarms trigger. These are useful for remote monitoring but still need physical detectors. If you suspect CO, evacuate and call 911. Do not waste time checking apps or searching online. Get out immediately.

What can falsely set off a carbon monoxide detector? +

Humidity, steam, and aerosol sprays can falsely trigger carbon monoxide detectors. Bathrooms and kitchens see more false alarms. Detectors near furnaces may react to normal startup gases. Dust buildup and aging sensors also cause chirping. In Chicago homes, basement dampness and winter condensation increase false alarms. However, never ignore an alarm. If your detector sounds, evacuate first and investigate later. If you experience repeated false alarms, move the detector away from steam sources or replace it. Test monthly and replace units every seven years. A malfunctioning detector is better than no detector.

How long does it take for a stove to be on to cause carbon monoxide poisoning? +

A gas stove running continuously can produce dangerous carbon monoxide levels in one to three hours, depending on ventilation. Using your stove or oven for heat accelerates CO buildup. Chicago's cold winters tempt residents to supplement heat this way. Do not do it. Even normal cooking produces some CO. Open a window slightly, use exhaust fans, and keep range hood vents clean. Never use gas stoves or ovens for space heating. If you smell gas or feel dizzy while cooking, open windows, turn off the stove, and evacuate. Call your gas utility immediately.

How can I test for CO in my home? +

Install UL-listed carbon monoxide detectors on every level of your Chicago home. Test them monthly. For professional testing, schedule a combustion analysis during your annual furnace inspection. HVAC technicians use electronic meters to measure CO in flue gases and ambient air. They check draft, venting, and heat exchanger integrity. This catches problems before detectors alarm. If you suspect a leak now, evacuate and call 911. The fire department will test CO levels and identify sources. Do not buy cheap handheld testers. They are inaccurate. Trust professional equipment and working detectors.

How quickly do you feel the effects of carbon monoxide poisoning? +

You can feel carbon monoxide effects in minutes at high concentrations or hours at lower levels. Mild exposure causes headache and fatigue within one to two hours. Moderate exposure brings nausea, dizziness, and confusion within 30 minutes. High concentrations cause collapse and death in minutes. Chicago's cold climate means closed windows and running furnaces increase exposure speed. Children, elderly residents, and people with heart conditions feel effects faster. If you suspect CO poisoning, evacuate immediately. Do not wait to feel worse. Call 911 from outside. Symptoms worsen fast. Brain damage occurs before you realize danger.

Why Chicago's Heating Season Makes CO Detection Critical

Chicago's extended heating season runs from October through April, with furnaces operating continuously during weeks of subzero temperatures. This prolonged runtime accelerates wear on heat exchangers, inducer motors, and venting systems. Older equipment in neighborhoods like Avondale, Portage Park, and Jefferson Park experiences stress levels that expose hidden cracks and failing components. When outdoor temperatures drop to single digits, furnaces cycle constantly, and any combustion defect becomes a continuous CO source. Chicago's aging housing stock compounds this risk. Properties built before 1960 often have original chimneys with deteriorating clay tile liners, corroded B-vent piping, and undersized flues shared by multiple appliances. These conditions create backdrafting and CO spillage even in properly functioning equipment.

Five Star HVAC Chicago maintains relationships with local building inspectors and understands Chicago's mechanical code requirements for combustion appliance installation and venting. We know which repairs require permits, how to properly size replacement equipment for Chicago's climate loads, and what venting configurations meet current code in buildings constructed under older standards. Our technicians recognize the specific CO risks present in Chicago's housing types, from two-flats in Gage Park to single-family bungalows in Norwood Park. This local expertise matters when diagnosing complex venting problems or recommending equipment replacements that must function reliably through Chicago winters. Choosing a local provider means working with technicians who understand your specific building type and the challenges created by Chicago's climate and building regulations.

HVAC Services in The Chicago Area

Whether you’re dealing with a heating emergency or planning an AC upgrade, Five Star is just around the corner. Serving Chicago and surrounding communities, we’re proud to be the go-to HVAC company for homes and businesses alike. Use the map below to locate us quickly, or give us a call for directions or on-site service availability. We’re always ready to help, no matter where you are in the area — because comfort should never be out of reach.

Address:
Five Star HVAC Chicago, 2828 N Clark St, Chicago, IL, 60657

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If your CO detector is alarming, you smell exhaust, or you are experiencing symptoms, evacuate immediately and call (708) 328-5999. Five Star HVAC Chicago dispatches emergency CO detection teams 24 hours a day. Your safety cannot wait.