Contractor feedback, an expanding distribution network, and a broad range of new products and technologies combined to mark the Danfoss annual press breakfast at the 2005 AHR Expo.
Compact sizes and increased capabilities were the recurring themes among a wide range of tools and test instruments shown for the first time at the 2005 International Air-Conditioning, Heating, Refrigerating Exposition (AHR Expo).
Maintaining close relations with distributors and contractors and a major national advertising campaign were focuses of the 2005 Distributors Conference of the Mitsubishi Electric HVAC Advanced Products Division.
Contractor feedback, an expanding distribution network, and a broad range of new products and technologies combined to mark the Danfoss annual press breakfast at the 2005 AHR Expo.
Informal talk on the floor of the 2005 AHR Expo focused on two familiar refrigerants - HCFC-22 and HFC-134a. The two were repeated topics in my informal conversations with manufacturers of equipment and refrigerants, as well as some contractors.
Receivers and reservoirs were among the newer refrigeration products on display at the 2005 International Air-Conditioning, Heating, Refrigerating Exposition (AHR Expo), where product innovations and the latest refrigerants competed for the spotlight.
There was no shortage of innovative compressor technology at the 2005 AHR Expo. But the consistent message to contractors was that the industry has those wide range of products geared for HFC refrigerants - and, in one case, CO2.
The Friday festivities and meeting, getting three days off a week, and no required overtime are a few of the reasons why Morris-Jenkins Co. is the Southeast region winner of The News' "Best Contractor To Work For" contest.
One of my most appreciated annual arrivals is simply titled "Refrigerant Report." It comes from Bitzer International and in the print version it is 36 pages of the most up-to-date, objective technical information on refrigerants.
The creation of comfort is far more complex than just putting in a heating and cooling system. According to Ken Summers of the Comfort Institute, it involves a "whole-house problem-solving approach."