Air Design Answers

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Air Design Answers is a straight-talk podcast for homeowners who want to understand their HVAC systems before something breaks. Each episode breaks down real-world heating and cooling issues, early warning signs, and smart decisions that prevent emergencies in real homes. You’ll also hear practical insights from commercial systems that explain why comfort systems fail, age, and perform the way they do everywhere. No sales pressure. No jargon. Just clear, honest guidance you can use.

Episodes

  1. 1D AGO

    Why Your Home Feels Cold Even Though Your Furnace Is Running

    Episode 7 – Why Your Home Feels Cold Even Though Your Furnace Is Running Your furnace is on.It’s running.But your home still feels cold. So what’s actually going on? In this episode, Chris and Todd from Air Design Services break down one of the most common winter comfort complaints homeowners experience — a house that never quite feels warm, even though the heat is technically working. We explain the real reasons this happens, including: • Poor airflow and duct design issues• Heat loss from insulation and air leaks• Oversized or undersized furnace problems• Cold air return restrictions• Basement temperature imbalance• Thermostat placement mistakes• Humidity and how it affects comfort Most homeowners assume “the furnace must be failing.” But in many cases, the furnace isn’t the real problem at all. Drawing from real service calls across Southwestern Ontario, we share practical examples of what we see inside homes every winter — and what actually fixes the issue versus what wastes money. If certain rooms feel colder than others…If your furnace runs constantly but the house never feels comfortable…Or if you’re wondering whether it’s time for repair, modification, or replacement… This episode gives you the clarity to understand what’s really happening before you make an expensive decision. 🎙 Hosted by Chris and Todd🔧 Real-world HVAC insight from the field🏠 Practical advice for homeowners❄️ Winter comfort explained properly Listen now and learn why “heat running” doesn’t always mean “home comfortable.”

    7 min
  2. 6D AGO

    Repair vs. Replacement During the Winter

    When your furnace stops working in the middle of winter, it doesn’t feel like a decision. It feels like an emergency. But most winter breakdowns don’t start in winter. In this episode of the Air Design Services Podcast, Chris and Todd break down the real conversation homeowners need to have before the coldest nights arrive: repair vs. replacement during winter. We’re not talking theory. We’re talking real numbers. • What a typical furnace repair actually costs • When a heat exchanger issue changes the equation • How age and efficiency impact long-term operating costs • Why emergency installations feel stressful — and planned winter replacements don’t • The hidden cost of waiting too long Winter doesn’t usually create heating problems — it exposes them. A system that was already working harder than it should have been simply runs out of margin when temperatures drop. We also walk through a real deep-winter failure case study and explain how timing affects cost, availability, and options. If you’re a homeowner in Southwestern Ontario trying to decide whether to repair your furnace or replace it before it fails, this episode gives you clarity — not sales pressure. The goal isn’t to push replacement. The goal is to give you control before winter makes the decision for you. 🎧 Listen now to understand the numbers behind furnace repair vs. furnace replacement — and how to avoid being forced into a last-minute emergency. Air Design Services Heating • Cooling • Refrigeration Serving Southwestern Ontario

    8 min
  3. FEB 6

    Emergency Furnace Repairs: What Homeowners Should Know

    When a furnace stops working in the middle of winter, it can feel overwhelming — especially when it happens at night, on a weekend, or during the coldest stretch of the year. In this episode of Air Design Answers, Todd and Chris break down what homeowners need to know about emergency furnace repairs, why breakdowns tend to happen at the worst possible times, and how many emergencies are actually caused by small, preventable issues. Chris, a field technician with Air Design Services, explains what truly qualifies as a furnace emergency, including no-heat situations, safety concerns like gas smells or carbon monoxide alarms, and repeated system shutdowns. The episode also covers common emergency repair causes such as failed igniters, dirty flame sensors, pressure switch problems, and aging control boards — issues technicians see every winter in real homes across Southwestern Ontario. You’ll also learn the early warning signs many homeowners overlook before an emergency happens, including short cycling, uneven heating, unusual noises, and systems that shut down and restart on their own. Todd and Chris discuss what homeowners should do when a furnace fails, what mistakes to avoid during a breakdown, and why emergency repairs often cost more than scheduled service. Most importantly, this episode focuses on how to reduce the risk of emergency furnace repairs, with practical advice on maintenance, filter changes, and paying attention to changes in system behavior — all explained without sales pressure or scare tactics. • Emergency furnace repair advice• What to do when a furnace stops working• Furnace troubleshooting during winter• Signs your furnace is about to fail• HVAC emergencies and safety concerns• How to avoid mid-winter furnace breakdowns Air Design Answers is a practical HVAC podcast hosted by Todd, with real-world insight from Chris of Air Design Services, helping homeowners make informed decisions about heating, cooling, and refrigeration systems. This episode is ideal for homeowners searching for:

    8 min

About

Air Design Answers is a straight-talk podcast for homeowners who want to understand their HVAC systems before something breaks. Each episode breaks down real-world heating and cooling issues, early warning signs, and smart decisions that prevent emergencies in real homes. You’ll also hear practical insights from commercial systems that explain why comfort systems fail, age, and perform the way they do everywhere. No sales pressure. No jargon. Just clear, honest guidance you can use.