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Whiteland is a small Johnson County community that has held onto its neighborhood character even as the surrounding metro area has grown up around it. Homes here tend to be well-kept and owner-occupied, and when something goes wrong with the plumbing, homeowners want a team that treats their property with the same care they do. Complete Comfort Heating, Air & Plumbing brings that standard to every job in Whiteland.
We are straightforward about what we find, skilled in what we do, and committed to leaving every home better than we found it.
Johnson County’s glacial plain geology gives Whiteland the same slow-draining, moisture-retentive soil conditions that define much of central Indiana, but the town’s position in the southern portion of the county adds a subtle topographic variation that channels surface and subsurface water toward low-lying residential areas more consistently than homeowners farther north might experience. After prolonged rain events, the ground stays saturated well beyond what the calendar suggests, and sump systems in Whiteland homes work harder and longer than their counterparts in better-draining terrain.
Many Whiteland homes were built during the 1970s through 1990s, a period whose plumbing materials are now showing predictable signs of age. Supply valves that have never been operated in decades may no longer fully close, water heaters are past or approaching their service limits, and drain connections that have been reliable for years can start to weep at joints as gaskets dry out and fittings loosen with thermal cycling. Our repair team handles these aging system calls regularly and gives homeowners a complete picture rather than a piecemeal fix.
Installation work in Whiteland most often involves updating systems that have reached the natural end of their useful life. Water heater replacements, sump pump upgrades before wet season, and supply valve replacements for homes where the originals have frozen with age are all calls we handle regularly here. We also take on fixture upgrades and bathroom refreshes for homeowners improving properties they plan to stay in for the long term.
We approach every Whiteland installation with the same attention to detail we bring to larger projects elsewhere. Permits are pulled where the work requires them, everything is installed to current code, and nothing is considered finished until it has been tested and the homeowner has had a chance to ask questions and feel good about the work.
Complete Comfort handles a full range of residential plumbing needs for Whiteland homeowners and the surrounding Johnson County area. The services we are called for most often in this community include the following.
We are available at any hour when a plumbing situation cannot wait and easy to schedule when it can.
We visited a homeowner named Jim last fall who had noticed a small water stain forming on the ceiling of his first-floor hallway, directly below a bathroom. He had checked the toilet and faucets and found nothing obviously leaking. Our technician ran water in the sink and tub for several minutes while watching the ceiling below and confirmed the stain was growing slowly when the tub drained.
The issue turned out to be a failing tub drain gasket at the overflow plate, a connection that leaks only under flow conditions and is easy to miss on a visual inspection. The gasket had dried and cracked over years of use and was allowing a small amount of drain water to escape into the floor cavity during each use. We replaced the overflow assembly, confirmed the leak was sealed, and dried out the accessible area around the fitting. Jim was relieved it was not a supply line leak, which would have meant a much more invasive repair. Knowing what to look for and where to look for it made the difference between a fast fix and a drawn-out investigation.
Whiteland is a community where people take care of their homes and expect the same from anyone they let through the door. We take that seriously. Here is what every customer gets when they call Complete Comfort.
We are proud to serve Whiteland and committed to being the plumbing team this community can count on year after year.
Leaks that only occur during active water use, like a drain gasket that seeps when the tub flows, often leave stains without an obvious standing drip. Overflow plate connections, toilet wax rings, and supply line fittings under pressure can all leak intermittently in ways that are difficult to spot without running water and watching what happens below. A plumber can test each system under use conditions to locate the source.
Turn the valve slowly. A functional valve should move smoothly and stop water flow completely when fully closed. A valve that is stuck, requires excessive force, or does not stop water when closed is corroded or worn internally and should be replaced. Testing shutoff valves before you need them in an emergency is always worthwhile.
Drain and shut off exterior hose bibs, insulate any pipes running through unheated spaces like garages or crawl spaces, and locate your main shutoff valve so you can act quickly if a pipe freezes and bursts. If you plan to be away during cold weather, keep the heat set no lower than 55 degrees to protect interior pipes.
Gaskets, washers, and slip joint connections used in drain assemblies dry out and shrink over time, especially in areas that go through temperature cycles with hot and cold water use. Joints that were sealed adequately during installation can begin to weep years later as the sealing material degrades. These are generally straightforward repairs once the leaking connection is identified.
Pour water into the pit slowly until the float rises and triggers the pump. The pump should activate promptly, remove the water efficiently, and shut off cleanly when the float drops. Listen for any unusual sounds during operation and check that the discharge line is flowing freely outside. If the pump hesitates, makes noise, or fails to activate, have it inspected before the heavy rains arrive.