Tips For Heating A Multistory House

Multistory homes often experience uneven heating; you find that the upper rooms and ground floors have different temperatures. This can be a real problem that can force you to keep adjusting the thermostat to even out the temperatures, often to no avail. Below are some tips to help you heat your multistory home evenly.

Ensure Proper Installation and Maintenance

In some cases, all you need to heat a multistory home is an adequately sized and installed heating system. You also need to maintain your heating system to ensure it always functions efficiently.  Poor installation and maintenance are always bad for heating. Since multistory homes are even more sensitive to heating inefficiencies than single-story homes, you need to get everything right from the beginning to heat your multistory home properly.

Ensure Perfect Controls and Adjustments

Once your heating system is properly installed, there may be adjustments and controls to make for continued efficiency. For example, you need to ensure all the vents and registers are properly adjusted. This will ensure proper air circulation so that the upstairs rooms can get adequate hot air. The fan setting should be 'On' so that the blower runs continuously and the air is always circulating in the house.

Use Two Heating Systems

One of the best ways to ensure your upstairs and downstairs rooms are adequately heated is to install two independent heating systems. This is a costly affair since two systems, even if they are relatively small, will cost more to install than a single heating system. However, you will get perfect heating (assuming everything else is in place) because you will just control the heating systems just as you would a single heating system in a single-story house.

Use a Zoning System

An alternative to two heating systems is to install a zoned heating system. This option makes sense if you have an adequately-sized heating system but there is a discrepancy in heating the different levels of the house due to their configurations. A zoned system divides your house into different heating zones, and each zone gets its thermometer for independent heating controls. This means the upstairs rooms will have their own thermometer and you can control its temperature independently of the thermostat for the downstairs rooms.

Hopefully, the above tips will help you heat your multistory home without any problems. If the tips don't help, however, you probably have a deeper problem with your heating system. Contact a local HVAC company or visit sites like http://www.coeheatcool.com to learn more. 


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