Cooling load in Craig Beach
Cooling demand here is real but seasonal. Lake Milton homes get humid summer afternoons off the water, and most of the older cottages were built with no central air at all — so we see a lot of window units, ductless mini-splits added to a sunroom or converted porch, and undersized condensers that can't keep up on a still July day.
Local heating stock in Craig Beach
Craig Beach is a Lake Milton village, and a lot of its housing started life as 1920s–1950s seasonal cottages that were later winterized into year-round homes. That history shows up in the heating: undersized older furnaces, electric baseboard and space heaters in additions, and the occasional through-the-wall unit doing more than it should. Cottages converted for full-time living often have a furnace that was never sized for a real Ohio winter, and exposed supply runs in crawl spaces and unheated lake rooms freeze the first hard night nobody's watching.
What we see across the county
Mahoning runs the full spectrum. Older Youngstown city homes have steam boilers, octopus furnaces, and chimney-vented water heaters living in shared mechanical rooms. Boardman and Canfield trend mid-century ranch — original duct runs, often-upgraded furnaces, frequently undersized AC. Newer Poland and Austintown builds are standard high-efficiency forced-air with central air. The commercial side of the county — restaurants and c-stores along Market Street, US-224, and Belmont Avenue — keeps our refrigeration trucks busy. That's the backdrop your Craig Beach system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.