Forced Air Heating / Cooling
Your forced air heating or cooling system has two parts, the outdoor unit and the indoor unit which are designed to work together. The furnace and the air handler are the distributor units which are responsible for evenly heating and or circulating air throughout your home. The indoor units can also reject heat to the outdoor unit (air conditioner) cooling your home.
Zonelife has the experience to properly match the indoor and outdoor units so that you can maximize efficiency, improve comfort and extend system life. The air in your home can be filtered, dehumidified, humidified, heated and cooled.
An air handler may be a better solution for a larger home because there are less design restrictions for outgoing venting and it maximizes the modulation when used with a boiler or geothermal unit. Venting is not required on an air handler due to no by-products being produced, it just circulates the cold and hot air effectively through your home and it can easily create temperature “zones” with their own thermostat.
For further details and uses see our Furnaces and Air Handlers pages.
Zonelife forced air heating and cooling systems have many benefits:
- Quiet. Zonelife experts design to maximize the efficiency of airflow through the home by optimizing duct run sizing and lengths which lets you get the most out of your system extremely quietly.
- Constant comfort. York® systems modulate to match the desired temperature when means less fluctuations because of fewer stops and starts.
- Standard installation. Zonelife sets up and installs with no extra steps or costs.
- Simple operation. Thermostats have evolved to make life easier. Going on vacation? Set it in seconds. Would you like it cooler at night, warmer in the afternoon and hot in the morning? Set it in seconds.
- Save. These forced air heating and cooling systems save money and energy by being able to operate at low capacity with high efficiency.
- Create comfort zones. For individual room temperatures we can offer zone control systems to keep certain areas above or below the overall temperature set.
