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UV Water Purification: How It Works and When You Need It

  UV Water Purification: How It Works and When You Need It UV water purification is a point-of-use (POU) or point-of-entry (POE) treatment method that uses ultraviolet light to deactivate microorganisms in water. Unlike boiling, UV doesn’t rely on heat; unlike chemical disinfection, it typically leaves no taste or smell. For households, travelers, and some facilities, UV has become a go-to option when reliable microbial control matters.   The core idea is simple: expose water to the right dose of UV radiation so that pathogens can’t reproduce. In most UV systems, water flows through a chamber where a UV lamp emits UV-C light (commonly around 254 nm), which targets the DNA and RNA of bacteria, viruses, and some protozoa.   How UV water purification works   In practice, a UV unit is built around four elements: a UV lamp (the UV source), a quartz sleeve (to protect the lamp while allowing UV transmission), a flow path (so water passes through the treatment zone), an ......
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SpacePak High-Velocity AC for Homes Without Ductwork

  SpacePak High-Velocity AC for Homes Without Ductwork SpacePak high-velocity AC has become a popular option for homeowners who want efficient heating and cooling without the disruption of installing large, conventional duct runs. Instead of bulky ductwork, the system uses smaller, insulated supply lines that can be routed through tight spaces—often making it a better fit for older homes, additions, and ductless-averse households.   At its core, a high-velocity system is built around a central air handler and a set of compact ducting components that distribute air throughout the home. Air is delivered through small-diameter ducts, which can be run through ceilings, closets, soffits, or other constrained areas where standard ductwork would be impractical.   How high-velocity AC works   SpacePak-style systems typically operate by moving air at higher velocities through the smaller ducts. A coil and blower in the air handler condition the air, while the compact distri ....

Boiler vs. Furnace: Which Heating System Fits You?

  Boiler vs. Furnace: Which Heating System Fits You? Homeowners often compare two major options for forced-warmth: boilers , which heat water that flows through radiators or in-floor systems, and furnaces , which heat air and distribute it through ducts.   Both can deliver efficient heating, but the “best” choice depends on how your home is built, what fuel you can access, and how you want your comfort to feel across the year.   How each system works   A boiler uses a burner (gas, oil, or sometimes electric) to heat water, then circulates it to emit heat via radiators, baseboard units, or hydronic floor loops. Because the system is moving warmed water, it can offer steady, even heat—particularly in homes that already support hydronic heating.   A furnace warms air in a combustion chamber (typically gas or electric heat) and sends it through a duct network to registe ... Read more »

Ductless Mini-Split vs Central AC for Older Homes

  Ductless Mini-Split vs Central AC for Older Homes Ductless mini-splits and central air both cool homes, but older properties can make the “best” choice look very different. Homes built before modern insulation standards, with leaky ducts—or without ducts at all—often benefit from systems designed for room-by-room comfort.   Below, we compare the two options with an older-home lens: retrofit feasibility, efficiency, comfort, and the tradeoffs homeowners typically weigh before signing a contract.   1) Retrofit reality: ducts (or the lack of them)   Central AC relies on ductwork to move conditioned air throughout the house. In older homes, ducts may be undersized, poorly sealed, routed through unconditioned spaces, or simply not present in the way a new system would need. Fixing or replacing ducts can quickly erase the “lower system price” gap.   Ductless mini-splits avoid most of that. They use an outdoor unit c ... Read more »

What Is a Zoning System for HVAC—and Do You Need One?

  What Is a Zoning System for HVAC—and Do You Need One? An HVAC zoning system is designed to control heating and cooling independently in different parts of a building. Instead of treating the whole home as one uniform space, zoning uses automated dampers in the ductwork (or, in some systems, independent equipment) to regulate airflow to specific “zones.” Each zone is typically paired with a thermostat, allowing different temperatures in different areas.   In practice, zoning can reduce common comfort issues such as rooms that overheat, basements that feel perpetually cold, or upper floors that run hotter than the rest of the house. By matching airflow to where occupants are spending time, zoning aims to improve comfort while avoiding unnecessary heating or cooling of unused areas.   How zoning works   Most residential zoning systems rely on dampers installed in the ducts and a controller that works with one or more thermostats. When a thermostat calls for hea ... Re...

Nest vs Ecobee vs Honeywell T9: Smart Thermostat Comparison

  Nest vs Ecobee vs Honeywell T9: Smart Thermostat Comparison Smart thermostats can reduce energy use while making it easier to keep your home comfortable. But with three popular options— Google Nest , ecobee , and Honeywell Home T9 —the “best” choice depends on your home layout, preferred app experience, and which smart-home platforms you already use.   This comparison looks at the core differences that affect everyday performance: how each system senses temperature, how well it manages multiple rooms, what automation features you actually get, and what to consider before buying.   1) Sensing and room-by-room comfort   ecobee is often the standout for homes that need multi-room control. Many models include built-in sensors and support additional remote room sensors, which can help heating and cooling respond to where people are—not just where the thermostat is mounted.  < ... Read more »

Hard Water on Chicago’s North Shore: Effects and Fixes

  Hard Water on Chicago’s North Shore: Effects and Fixes Residents along Chicago’s North Shore often notice the telltale signs of hard water: cloudy glass, white scale on faucets, and soap that doesn’t rinse as cleanly. While hard water is not considered unsafe to drink, it can create real headaches for plumbing, appliances, skin, and household cleaning.   What hard water is—and why it happens locally   Hard water contains high levels of dissolved minerals, most commonly calcium and magnesium. In the Chicago area, these minerals can come through natural water sources and affect the local water profile. The result is water that leaves mineral deposits when it evaporates.   For homeowners, the biggest impact is visible: rings around sinks, dull shower doors, and buildup inside showerheads. Over time, scale can also accumulate in pipes and water-using appliances.   How hard water affects your home   First, hard w ... Read more »