Built for NE Ohio winters
Ravenna sits inland about 15 miles east of Akron, milder than the lake-effect snow belt but still a real Northeast Ohio winter — long damp cold from November through March and a 42-inch frost line. The older downtown housing loses heat fast through balloon-framed walls and aging envelopes, so no-heat season runs long here and calls spike on the first hard freeze. The frost line here is about 42 inches and hard-freeze season runs November through March, so heating equipment in Ravenna works longer and harder than it would almost anywhere else — and the cost of a no-heat call in February is a lot higher than an inconvenience.
Local heating stock in Ravenna
Ravenna is the Portage County seat and its oldest core, which makes it the closest thing in the county to the steel-belt housing we work on in Warren. Downtown and the older North End neighborhoods are full of homes built before 1950 — gravity furnaces retrofitted to forced air, the occasional original boiler, and chimney-vented systems that have been patched for decades. Past the older core, the postwar and 70s-80s neighborhoods run mid-grade forced-air furnaces, plenty of them original and overdue. Ravenna gives us more old-system work than the newer Portage cities to the north.
What we see across the county
Portage skews newer than Trumbull or Mahoning. Aurora and Streetsboro grew through the 80s and 90s, so high-efficiency forced-air with central AC is the norm. Kent has a mix — student-rental triplexes with original boilers, faculty homes with mid-grade furnaces, and post-2000 builds with heat pumps showing up more every year. We see fewer steam systems here than in Trumbull, and more ductless mini-splits in additions and converted attics near campus. That's the backdrop your Ravenna system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.
Snow-belt heating season
Ravenna heating systems run November through March with very few breaks. That constant duty cycle is why we push fall tune-ups hard here — a furnace, boiler, or heat pump that gets a pre-season check is far less likely to quit on the coldest night of the year, which in Portage County is exactly when you can least afford to lose heat.