Learning about high velocity heating and cooling

Until a couple of years ago, our husband and I had never heard of high-velocity heating and cooling. Owning an older beach beach house provided us limited possibilities for centralized temperature control. Our beach beach house was constructed sometime during the mid 1740s and is not outfitted with a duct system. The studs in several of the walls were turned sideways to create a greater residing space. Because the walls are especially tight, they won’t accommodate conventional air duct. My husband and I were unwilling to tear down our walls and ceilings and get into a major, messy and super costly remodeling project, however for many years, every one of us struggled to achieve comfort by way of window air conditionings, box fans and electric baseboard heaters. The weather extremes in our local section meant that our beach house was warm during the summer time months and chilly over the winter. I also hated the appearance of the portable heating and cooling options. I was genuinely ecstatic when I came across high-velocity temperature control. This style of heating and cooling plan was developed identifiably for historical homes. It features flexible mini-ducts that are only multiple-inches in diameter. These tubes can be inserted into existing walls and snaked around obstacles such as studs, plumbing pipes and electrical lines, without causing destruction. The ducts connect to six-inch diameter, round vents that are available in all sorts of styles and allow freedom of location. The heating/cooling component is compact enough to install into a closet. The plan works through a process called aspiration that suddenly raises or lowers room temperature, making high-velocity heating/cooling honestly energy efficient. Every one of us are gleeful to have the ability to adjust a central thermostat.

 

 

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