The Full Catalog · ZIP 32082
Sub-Zero Repair Services Across Ponte Vedra Beach
Six lines of work, one technician standard — from a forty-minute coil cleaning to a full evaporator replacement on a thirty-year-old classic.
Sub-Zero Repair Ponte Vedra runs six service lines across the 32082 ZIP — refrigerator, freezer, ice maker, and wine storage repair, door gasket replacement, and full sealed-system work. Most calls close between $250 and $1,100; evaporator and compressor jobs run $1,000–$3,000, always quoted in writing after diagnosis.
For Sub-Zero repair across Ponte Vedra Beach — Sawgrass, Marsh Landing and the oceanfront — call (904) 902-0927 or Book online.
Line by Line
What Each Service Line Covers
Ponte Vedra Beach kitchens skew toward two extremes — original 500 and 600 series classics in Sawgrass and Old Ponte Vedra, and BI-generation built-ins from the remodel wave — so each line below is tuned to the equipment this ZIP actually holds.
Refrigerator repair
The broadest line: warm fresh-food sections, short cycling, water pooling under crispers, failed evaporator fans, and tired cold controls. Diagnosis happens at the appliance with gauges and a meter, never by guesswork over the phone. Start at the refrigerator repair page for symptoms and ranges.
Freezer repair
Soft ice cream, frost climbing the back wall, and ice sheets under the basket nearly always trace to defrost components or drain icing — a defrost fault left alone eventually masquerades as a dead unit. The freezer service line sorts the inexpensive fixes from the structural ones.
Ice maker repair
Water here runs 14 grains per gallon and harder off the Floridan aquifer, so fill valves and inlet screens scale shut on a schedule. We descale, replace valves, and restore production — details on the ice maker page, including why summer output drops first.
Wine cooler repair
Dual-zone 424 and 427 cabinets drift quietly; a thermistor a few degrees off can sit unnoticed for a season. The wine storage line covers the 400 series through current cabinets, butler’s pantries to summer kitchens.
Door gasket replacement
Within sight of the ocean a gasket hardens in three or four years, and a leaking seal taxes the compressor every hour it runs. Fresh OEM seals are the cheapest longevity work we do — the gasket page shows the dollar-bill test and what replacement involves.
Sealed system repair
Refrigerant leaks, failed compressors, and evaporator replacement — the work most shops decline and the center of this practice. The sealed-system page explains the proof we require before quoting a four-figure repair.
Planning Figures
How Repairs Price Out in 32082
These are current Northeast Florida market lanes, not quotes — the written number comes after diagnosis at your kitchen. They hold for everything from a Marsh Landing galley to an oceanfront bar suite.
| Service line | Most frequent job locally | Typical lane |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator repair | Evaporator fan or cold-control replacement | $550–$1,100 |
| Freezer repair | Defrost heater and drain service | $550–$1,100 |
| Ice maker repair | Descale plus water inlet valve | $250–$700 |
| Wine cooler repair | Thermistor or evaporator-icing correction | $550–$1,100 |
| Door gaskets | Full seal set on a salt-exposed unit | $550–$900 |
| Sealed system | Evaporator replacement on a 500/600 classic | $1,500–$3,000 |
Booking runs through the Ponte Vedra line at (904) 902-0927 or the online booking page; either way the appointment is confirmed with a window, not a whole-day wait.
One line, one technician, no dispatch queue
(904) 902-0927Why Coastal Service Here Is Its Own Discipline
Two local forces shape nearly every ticket we write. The first is salt: along Ponte Vedra Boulevard and the Sawgrass beach side, airborne chloride corrodes condenser fins year-round, which is why our maintenance intervals run quarterly there instead of annually. The second is lightning — Northeast Florida sees more than a hundred thunderstorm days a year, and the restoration surge after an outage is the single most common killer of built-in control boards we replace.
Housing stock matters just as much. Sawgrass Country Club and Marsh Landing went up largely between the late 1970s and the 1990s, so the refrigeration behind that cabinetry is often original — equipment worth preserving, given that a built-in replacement starts near $14,000 before carpentry. That arithmetic is laid out honestly in our repair-or-replace guide.
One boundary stated plainly: units from the 2022-and-newer CL and DET/DEC generation still under factory warranty belong with Factory Certified Service first. We pick them up after coverage ends, and handle maintenance and second opinions in the meantime.
What Every Service Call Includes, Step by Step
Whichever line the work lands on, the visit opens the same way — a fixed diagnostic sequence that protects the four-figure decisions from a guess.
- Identity and history The model and serial come off the tag — behind the kickplate on classics — and we note the unit’s age, any prior repairs, and the symptom as you describe it.
- Temperatures, in writing Fresh-food and freezer readings against the 38°F and 0°F benchmarks, plus a wine cabinet’s zones at bottle height where one is present.
- Airflow before electronics The grille comes off and the condenser is inspected first; on coastal streets a salt-fouled coil is the most likely fault and the cheapest to clear.
- Electrical, then the sealed system Fan draw, thermistor resistance, board behavior — and gauges on the loop only when airflow and electrics pass, so a compressor is never quoted on assumption.
- Written quote, then repair Parts and labor itemized for approval before any work begins; the cabinet gets its 24-hour stabilization window and a benchmark check before we leave.
Which Symptom Belongs to Which Line
Owners rarely know the part name, only what they see. This is the shorthand we use to route a call to the right service line before the truck rolls.
| What you notice | Likely line | Most common cause locally |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh food warm, freezer fine | Refrigerator repair | Evaporator fan, or a 561-style coil leak |
| Frost on the back wall, ice under the basket | Freezer repair | Defrost heater, thermostat, or a clogged drain |
| Cubes small, hollow, or production halved | Ice maker repair | Scaled fill valve on 14–28 grain water |
| Wine zone holding several degrees off | Wine cooler repair | Drifted dual-zone thermistor |
| Door sweats, unit runs more than it did | Door gasket replacement | Salt-hardened seal at three to four years |
| Runs constantly, partial frost on the coil | Sealed system repair | Refrigerant leak, proven on gauges |
When to Call and What an Owner Can Safely Do
Not every Sub-Zero symptom needs a technician the same hour, and a few owner checks genuinely save a service call. Here is where the line sits.
| Situation | Safe to try yourself | Call us when |
|---|---|---|
| Warm after a storm outage | Give it the 24-hour recovery window; confirm the breaker | Panel is dark with lights on, or it stays warm past a day |
| Weak or small ice cubes | Replace the filter if it is past six months | Production stays low after a fresh filter |
| Unit running more than usual | Vacuum loose dust from the visible grille area | Run time stays high, or a code appears |
| Service light or display message | Note the exact code or wording to report | Always — codes are traced, not just cleared |
| Water or frost inside the cabinet | Dry it and watch whether it returns | It recurs within a week — the drain or seal needs work |
Scheduling a Whole-House Visit on a Multi-Unit Estate
Most kitchens we serve in 32082 are not one appliance but a fleet — a primary refrigerator, an all-refrigerator or all-freezer column nearby, a wine cabinet in the butler’s pantry, and frequently an outdoor undercounter ice machine. Because salt corrosion and storm surges rarely single out one cabinet, the efficient call is the whole-house visit: one trip charge, one appointment, and a written report covering every unit’s coils, gaskets, temperatures and water components. It also catches the quiet failures — a wine zone two degrees off, a second column drifting — before they become emergencies during a busy entertaining week.
| Unit in the household | What gets checked | Why it matters here |
|---|---|---|
| Primary kitchen refrigerator | Condenser, seals, temperatures, board behavior | Highest duty cycle and the first to show salt or surge stress |
| All-refrigerator / all-freezer column | Drain, gasket, fan, defrost circuit | Often a paired set; one fails before the other, quietly |
| 424 / 427 wine cabinet | Dual-zone thermistors at bottle height, condensate path | Drift goes unnoticed for a season and the bottles pay for it |
| Outdoor / summer-kitchen undercounter | Coil for salt, fill valve, condensate management | No shelter from salt, sand or humidity; fails soonest |
The Parts a Catalog of Calls Turns On
Across all six lines, a short list of components accounts for most of the repairs we close in 32082, and each wears out for a reason particular to this coast rather than a generic one.
| Part | Line it falls under | Why it fails locally |
|---|---|---|
| Door gasket set | Door gasket replacement | Salt air hardens the elastomer in three to four years |
| Water inlet valve and screen | Ice maker repair | 14–28 grain water scales the seat and screen shut |
| Control board | Refrigerator / freezer repair | Storm-restoration surges lock BI and 600 series boards |
| Evaporator fan motor | Refrigerator / freezer repair | Bearings dry out after decades on the classics |
| Evaporator coil | Sealed system repair | Refrigerant leaks on 561 and 532 fresh-food coils |
Common Questions
About the Service Catalog
Which Sub-Zero repairs do you handle in-house rather than refer out?
All of them, including sealed-system work — evaporator replacement, compressor swaps, brazing, evacuation, and recharge happen on our own bench, not a subcontractor’s. Most local companies stop at boards and gaskets and decline the deep refrigeration work; that deeper tier is the reason this practice exists.
Do you carry parts for both the classic series and newer built-ins?
The truck is stocked for what 32082 actually holds: gasket kits, thermistors, fan motors, and cold controls for 500 and 600 series classics, plus boards, water valves, and filters for BI-generation built-ins. Anything rarer — a scarce 600 series control board, for instance — is sourced before the repair visit so the job closes in one trip.
Can one appointment cover several units in the same household?
Yes, and in Ponte Vedra Beach it usually should. Most estates we serve run two or three refrigeration units plus wine storage, so we block enough time to inspect everything in one visit — one trip charge, one report covering each unit’s condition, coils, gaskets, and water components.
Is there a maintenance plan for oceanfront kitchens?
We schedule standing condenser-care visits — quarterly for homes within roughly a thousand feet of the surf along Ponte Vedra Boulevard, semiannual for inland streets. Each visit covers coil cleaning, gasket inspection, drain check, and temperature verification against the 38°F and 0°F benchmarks.
Which Sub-Zero problems can wait a few days, and which cannot?
A fresh-food section creeping to 45°F or a stalled ice maker can hold a day or two; a freezer above 10°F or a unit running nonstop without cooling should not. The reason is contents and compressor strain — soft frozen food refreezes poorly, and a compressor fighting a choked condenser or low charge shortens its own life every hour it runs. When in doubt, describe the temperatures when you book and we triage the order.
Do you charge a separate trip fee on top of the service call in 32082?
No. The $185–$295 service call is the visit and the diagnosis together — one charge that documents model, serial, temperatures, condenser airflow and door seals. For a multi-unit estate we hold the trip charge to a single appointment and inspect every refrigerator, freezer and wine cabinet in the house under it, rather than billing per cabinet.
Can you tell over the phone whether my Sub-Zero is worth repairing?
Only roughly, and we say so. The series and the symptom narrow it — a 561 with partial coil frost or a BI with a dark panel after a storm have predictable lanes — but the binding verdict needs gauges, a condenser inspection and the cabinet temperatures read on site. We give you the likely range when you call and the firm number, in writing, after diagnosis.
Which service line should I start with if I am not sure what is wrong?
Start with refrigerator or freezer repair by the compartment that is misbehaving, and let the diagnosis route it from there — many calls that begin as one line resolve on another. A warm fresh-food section can turn out to be a door gasket; weak ice can turn out to be a freezer running above 0°F. The diagnostic fee is the same wherever the fault lands, so describing the symptom honestly when you book matters more than naming the right line.
Do you offer second opinions on a quote from another company?
Yes, and we are comfortable doing it. If another technician has quoted a compressor or a replacement, our diagnostic visit reads the same evidence independently — condenser airflow, electrical draw, frost pattern, gauge pressures — and tells you in writing what we actually find. On a classic in Sawgrass or Old Ponte Vedra, a four-figure quote written without gauges on the system is worth a second look before you authorize it.
Arrange a Visit to Your Kitchen
Telephone hours run Monday through Saturday, 7:30 to 6:30. Same-week appointments across 32082, gate access arranged in advance.