Pyramid Home Inspections
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Heating and Cooling Glossary
Here is a quick overview of terms used in this
guide and that you’ll need to know as you gather information about your home
heating and cooling options.
AIR SOURCE HEAT PUMP
A heating-cooling unit that transfers heat in
either direction between the air outside a home and the indoors.
AIR SUPPLY FOR
COMBUSTION
The air that a furnace, boiler or space heater
requires to burn fuel.
AQUASTAT
A thermostat that controls the water temperature in
a boiler.
BOILER
The heating unit used with a hot water (hydronic)
distribution system.
CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONER
A unit that cools an entire house by removing heat
from the inside air and releasing it outside.
CONTROLS
Devices such as a thermostat that regulate a
heating or cooling system.
CONVENTIONAL GAS FURNACE OR
BOILER
A gas heating unit with an annual fuel utilization
efficiency (AFUE) less than 70%. It exhausts through a masonry chimney (which
should be lined) or metal “B” vent.
COST-EFFECTIVE HEATING/COOLING
SYSTEM
One that produces good value for money after all
costs (purchase, installation, financing and energy charges) are
considered.
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
The components of a heating or cooling system that
deliver warmed or cooled air, or warmed water, to the living space.
DOMESTIC HOT WATER
Hot water used for household purposes.
EARTH ENERGY SYSTEM (ground source
heat pump)
A heat pump that transfers heat from the earth or
ground water in cold weather and transfers it to the house through an
underground piping system for space heating, cooling or water heating. The
process reverses in warm weather, and heat is discharged to the ground or
water.
ELECTRICAL RESISTANCE
HEATING
Heat produced by passing electricity through a
resistor.
FLAME RETENTION HEAD
BURNER
A higher-efficiency burner in an oil furnace. It
produces a hotter flame and operates with a lower air flow, thus reducing heat
loss up the chimney.
FLUOROCARBON
REFRIGERANTS
The fluids commonly used in refrigerating and air
conditioning equipment to create the cooling effect. These fluids can damage the
environment.
FORCED AIR
A distribution system in which a fan circulates air
from the heating or cooling unit to the rooms through a network of
ducts.
FOSSIL FUEL
A naturally occurring carbon or hydrocarbon fuel
such as natural gas, propane and oil, formed by the decomposition of prehistoric
organisms.
FURNACE
A heating unit that uses a forced air distribution
system.
GROUND SOURCE HEAT
PUMP
Another term for an Earth Energy
System.
HEAT EXCHANGER
A structure that transfers heat from one gas or
liquid to another gas or liquid. For example, the hot combustion gases in a
furnace to the circulating household air or, in a boiler, to the circulating hot
water.
HEAT RECOVERY VENTILATOR
(HRV)
A device used in central ventilation systems to
reduce the amount of heat that is lost as household air is replaced with outside
air. As fresh air enters the house, it passes through a heat exchanger heated by
the warm outgoing air stream and is preheated.
HIGH-EFFICIENCY (condensing) FURNACE OR
BOILER
A heating unit with an annual fuel utilization
efficiency (AFUE) of 90% or more. It has a second stainless steel heat exchanger
that removes additional heat from exhaust gases. Water vapor condenses as the
exhaust cools. The unit vents through a narrow plastic wall pipe instead of a
chimney.
HYDRONIC SYSTEM
A distribution system in which hot water is
circulated through a network of pipes to radiators, wall panels or an
under-floor heating system.
INSTALLED COST
The total of the purchase price and the
installation costs of equipment.
INSTANTANEOUS WATER
HEATER
A device that heats water as required but does not
store it. The unit is usually located near the point of use.
INTEGRATED (combo) HOT WATER
SYSTEM
A system that provides both space and water heating
from a single heat source.
KILOWATT
A unit of electrical power used to measure the
heating capacity of electric equipment. One kilowatt (kW) equals 1,000 watts
(W).
MID-EFFICIENCY NATURAL GAS OR PROPANE FURNACE OR BOILER
A gas heating unit with an annual fuel utilization
efficiency (AFUE) of 78 to 82%. Some models exhaust
through the basement wall.
NEW OIL FURNACE
Efficiencies (AFUE) range from 78 to 86%. Has flue
gases that may be exhausted through a chimney or a side wall vent.
R-2000
A performance standard for new homes under a
voluntary government/industry program. Builders meet the standard by offering an
integrated package of features designed to meet the R-2000 requirements. The
package includes high insulation levels, air-tightness, heat recovery
ventilation and efficient heating/cooling systems.
RETROFIT
Replacement of one or more components of an
existing system.
SEASONAL EFFICIENCY
A performance rating that considers the heat (or
‘cool’) actually delivered to the living space, the total energy available in
the fuel consumed, and the impact the equipment itself has on the total heating
or cooling load through an entire heating or cooling season. HSPF, AFUE, SEER
and EF are seasonal efficiency ratings.
SEER
seasonal energy efficiency ratio
SETBACK THERMOSTAT
A programmable thermostat with a built-in timer.
You can adjust it to vary household temperature automatically.
SPACE HEATER
A heating unit that supplies heat directly to the
room where it is located and is not connected to a distribution
system.
STORAGE-TYPE WATER
HEATER
A tank that heats and stores hot
water.
TON
A measure of the cooling capacity for central air
conditioners and heat pumps.
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