Cooling load in Andover
Andover sits inland and rural, away from the lake's cooling breeze, so summers here run warmer than the shoreline towns and central air is genuinely useful. Many older village and farm homes were built with no cooling at all, so we see window units and ductless mini-splits added a room at a time, plus the occasional full retrofit. When we install, we size for the actual home and the open, sun-exposed lots out here rather than a generic chart.
Local heating stock in Andover
Andover is a small farm village in the far southeast corner of the county, out by Pymatuning Lake near the Pennsylvania line. This is rural propane-and-wood country — natural-gas service is thin out here, so we see propane furnaces as the rule rather than the exception, plus a real amount of wood and pellet backup carrying homes through the coldest stretches. The housing is a mix of older village homes around the square and farmhouses spread across open land, much of it heated by equipment that has to be reliable because the nearest help is a haul away. We carry parts for propane and older systems on the truck for exactly that reason.
What we see across the county
Ashtabula housing splits three ways: lakeshore (Ashtabula port, Geneva-on-the-Lake) with older mixed-use and seasonal cottages, farm towns (Jefferson, Andover, Williamsfield) with older homes on propane or wood-supplemented heating, and the Geneva wine-country corridor with mid-grade suburban builds. Standard air-source heat pumps are less common here than in Portage — Ashtabula winters are too brutal for anything but cold-climate inverters. Most homes run gas or propane furnaces with the redundancy of a backup heat source somewhere. That's the backdrop your Andover system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.