Cooling load in Salem
Most of Salem's older homes were built for radiators and gravity heat, not central air, so cooling here is a retrofit story: condensers added decades after the house was framed, line sets squeezed through balloon-framed walls, and ductwork that was never designed to move cool air to the second floor. The mid-century ranches out toward E State Street cool more predictably, but they often run an original, oversized condenser that short-cycles and never really pulls the humidity down on a sticky July afternoon.
Local heating stock in Salem
Salem is the commercial center of Columbiana County, and it has the oldest, densest housing in the roster. Quaker-founded in 1806, the core neighborhoods around the downtown and South Lincoln Avenue historic districts are full of 1890s–1940s homes — which means original gravity 'octopus' furnaces converted to forced air, undersized return ducting, and chimneys old enough to need a real look before they vent a modern 80%-AFUE furnace. Salem sits inside the natural-gas footprint, so we see more gas furnaces here than in the rural townships around it, but the older the house, the more retrofit work it takes to heat it evenly. Salem is also our refrigeration hub for the south — the restaurants and groceries along E State Street keep a refrigeration truck busy alongside the residential furnace work.
What we see across the county
Columbiana housing leans rural and older. A lot of the homes we service in Salem, Lisbon, and the surrounding townships are 60+ years old with original gravity furnaces converted to forced air — sometimes running propane instead of natural gas because rural gas-line coverage is thin out here. East Liverpool's housing stock is older still: late-1800s pottery-era riverfronts with retrofitted heating. Wood-supplemented heating is more common down here than anywhere else in our service area, which means more chimney inspections and CO testing on every visit. That's the backdrop your Salem system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.