Maintaining the ideal indoor climate can be challenging. It’s common for homes to heat and cool unevenly. When one area is comfortable, another area of the may be too warm or too cold. Household members with varying temperature preferences can compound the problem further. But now there is a solution: the Lennox iHarmony zoning system. When matched with Lenox Communicating …
Consider the Features and Benefits of Zoned Heating Systems
Homes with zoned heating systems typically have lower heating bills and greater comfort. Zoning a heating system involves dividing your home into separate spaces that have similar thermal characteristics. Each zone will have its own thermostat that operates when needed. Without zoning, your furnace will heat your entire home at once, based on the temperature near your thermostat. If your home has any of these characteristics, you might benefit …
Essential Facts About HVAC Zoning Systems for Kansas Homes
It’s can be tough to accurately heat and cool a home using a single thermostat. Different rooms have different temperature needs. Sometimes this is due to construction, windows, or inefficiency. Other times it comes down to the personal temperature preferences of the occupants. Add multiple floors into the mix, and things can really get tricky. If this sounds like a …
Add a Zoning System to Your Heating and Cooling
There are many ways homeowners can improve the comfort of their home and save money while doing it. One way is to add a zoning system to an existing forced-air cooling and heating set-up.
What To Keep In Mind While Considering A Zoning System
If you’re searching for a new way to put a substantial dent in your monthly heating and cooling bills, you should consider installation of a zoning system in your Kansas City area home. Separating your home into discrete climate zones with independent temperature control will allow you to save money on energy while giving your home’s occupants control over comfort …
Your Home Might Be A Prime Candidate For A Zoning System
The laws of physics make cooling an entire house to a single, uniform temperature virtually impossible. Hot air rises, which means that upper floors will remain warm long after the lower floors have cooled. Also, the sun will heat a house on one side in the morning and the other side in late afternoon. But still, the whole house’s temperature …
One Room Too Hot And Another Too Cold? You May Need A Zoning System
From sub-zero winter nights to summer days with heat indexes shattering the 100-degree mark, citizens of the Kansas City area are familiar with both ends of the weather spectrum. With the ever-changing outdoor climate, the interior temperature of homes also can be unpredictable.