Cooling load in McDonald
Cooling here is retrofit work on village housing built for radiators and gravity heat. Central air was added decades after these homes went up, so we see undersized condensers, line sets run wherever they'd fit, and old walls with little insulation that let cooled air bleed away. The compact lots also put outdoor units close to the house and the neighbors, so placement and quiet operation matter more here than on a typical suburban lot.
Local heating stock in McDonald
McDonald is a compact early-1900s village built around the steel and rail industries, and its housing is tight and close-built. Most of what we heat is pre-1950 stock — gravity 'octopus' furnaces converted to forced air, the occasional cast-iron-radiator boiler, and coal-era chimneys still venting modern equipment. The lots are small and the mechanical rooms tighter, so a furnace replacement in McDonald is as much about careful access and venting as it is about the equipment itself.
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 McDonald system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.