Cooling load in Howland
Howland's subdivisions were built duct-ready with central air, so cooling work here is clean and conventional. The most common issue is a 20-to-30-year-old condenser at the end of its life, or an original unit that was oversized for the home and short-cycles through humid afternoons. The newer King Graves Road builds come properly sized with modern, efficient cooling. Either way, we measure the real load rather than swapping like-for-like on assumption.
Local heating stock in Howland
Howland Township is right next door to our shop and runs newer than the steel-town cores. The housing is dominated by 1960s-through-1990s ranch and colonial subdivisions, with high-end newer construction along King Graves Road. That means mostly conventional forced-air heating — standard and high-efficiency furnaces — with heat pumps increasingly common in the newest builds. There's far less gravity-furnace and boiler work here than in Niles or Girard; Howland calls are more often tune-ups, control repairs, and right-sized replacements on systems that are simply aging out.
What we see across the county
Trumbull is steel-belt housing. A lot of the homes we service in Warren, Niles, and Hubbard were built between 1920 and 1960, which means cast-iron radiators, gravity ductwork retrofitted with forced air, and 60-year-old chimneys still venting modern furnaces. The newer Howland, Cortland, and Liberty subdivisions trend toward standard high-efficiency furnaces with ducted central air. We've worked on every era — and we stock parts for all of it on the truck. That's the backdrop your Howland system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.