Munchkin Boiler Reviews - Munchkin offers small boilers for residential and light commercial use with efficiency AFUE ratings from 92% AFUE to 95% AFUE* that range in capacities from 18,000 BTUh to 399,000 BTUh. Munchkin hot water boilers can be easily converted from natural gas to propane gas and use sealed combustion technology. (more…)
New Yorker Boiler Reviews - New Yorker Residential heating boilers offer various boilers for heating homes. New Yorker is based out of Hatfield, PA, and offers boilers in gas and oil plus some add-ons for coal and wood for selected boilers. The capacity ranges for New Yorker hot water boilers make them ideal for residential use. The efficiency ranges for New Yorker hot water boilers range from 80% AFUE to 87.6% AFUE* (according to New Yorker efficiency ratings listed on the New Yorker website). (more…)
Peerless offers boilers with efficiency ranges from 80% AFUE to 95% AFUE* and has a line-up of boilers for residential and commercial use. Peerless Boilers also offers gas fired boilers, oil fired boilers, baseboards for radiant heating, and indirect fired water heaters. (more…)
Slant Fin Boiler Reviews - Slant Fin offers boilers with efficiency ranges from 82% AFUE to 95% AFUE for the Slant Fin line-up of gas-fired boilers for residential heating applications.
Slant Fin also offers a full line of oil-fired boilers, electric boilers, radiant heating products such as baseboards, radiant tubing, manifolds and headers, fittings, couplings, and adapters, electro-mechanical controls for radiant heating, and electronic controls for hydronic heating applications. (more…)
Weil-McLain Boiler Reviews - Weil-McLain offers boilers in efficiency ranges from 81% AFUE to 96.5% AFUE for the Weil-McLain condensing boilers. Furthermore, Weil-McLain specializes in manufacturing oil and gas-fired hot water and steam boilers among other hot water and steam components to support the boilers.
Furthermore, they discontinued their line of gas furnaces, air conditioners, water source air handlers, and evaporator coils. (more…)
Amana Package Unit Reviews - Amana package units come in various configurations including straight air conditioner package units, heat pump package units, dual fuel heat pumps with gas heat for backup heat, and gas furnace and air conditioner package or gas packs for light commercial and residential use. (more…)
American Standard Package Unit Reviews | Consumer Ratings - American Standard package units come in all available combinations from hybrid heat pumps with gas heat for the backup heat, to air conditioners with electric heat or gas heat, to straight heat pump package units or straight air conditioner systems. (more…)
Carrier Package Unit Reviews - Carrier package units come in a variety of configurations including a hybrid heat pump package unit with gas heat for backup heat, an air conditioner package unit with gas heat known as a gas pack, and an air conditioner with electric heat as an option. Carrier produces a full line of package units for residential, light commercial, and commercial applications. Carrier commercial package units will be covered in a future planned section titled Commercial HVAC. Carrier package unit consumer ratings are a comprehensive technical review. (more…)
Ducane Package Unit Reviews - Ducane package units can be purchased as heat pump package units, a gas furnace with air conditioning, air conditioning with electric heat, and heat pumps with gas heating for the backup heat. Ducane is produced primarily for residential and light commercial applications.
Ducane package units come in sizes ranging from 2 to 5 tons for residential and light commercial use and a standard efficiency range of 14 SEER and 81 AFUE for the average Ducane package unit.
Goodman GPG15M Package Unit Reviews - Richard, I was wondering if you could give me your technical review on the following unit I am considering purchasing.
The unit is a Goodman. Model GPH15M Packaged Heat Pump, 15 SEER. Also, your opinion on Goodman units in general.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks, Mike (more…)
HVAC Tip - According to studies done by the Department of Energy, 50 percent of the heat loss experienced in the average home occurs through the ceiling. That makes a lot of sense since heat rises. You can reduce that heat loss (heat gain in the summer months) by adding another layer of insulation in the attic. That will hold more heat in our homes for a longer period of time which means the furnace will cycle less. That means you are going to save money. A lot more money than another layer of insulation costs. Additionally, having an attic fan controlled by a thermostat installed in your attic will remove a lot of heat in the summer. This will help you, in addition to having more insulation, reduce heat gain from the attic in the summer.
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