A house with balanced humidity is part of residential HVAC cooling

A house with balanced humidity is part of residential HVAC cooling

I’m glad to live where I do.

This time of year is especially pleasant.

It’s nice to walk outside and not hear the symphony of heat pumps. Normally, that’s what you hear in the neighborhood. For many, the air conditioning comes on in mid March and stays on until November. I’m not quite that needy when it comes to HVAC cooling. In fact, I do my best to wait as long as possible in the spring before I hit the HVAC cooling switch. And even then, I try to be sure that the thermostat setting is in the lower 80’s. Getting acclimated to the heat and humidity around here makes it easier for me once the intense summer heat is with us for at least four months. I like to stay outside all year which is why I live here in the first place. So staying inside the HVAC cooling all summer just really isn’t my style. That’s why it’s important for me to get accustomed to the heat so I can still enjoy being outside during the morning and the evening in summer. However, attempting to get through our summers without any sort of air conditioning would be folly. I sure wouldn’t want to sleep in a hot house come July and August. But even more importantly, my house would not have the humidity balance that comes with air conditioning. And that would mean probably being inundated with mold & mildew. That is for sure something I absolutely don’t want to deal with. I’m very thankful that I have residential HVAC which both cools my home and reduces humidity levels to a very nice balance.
heat pump