Information about the Fairfield Heating System
The term central heating is used to describe many types and forms of heating, and some usage is totally misleading and inaccurate, through ignorance of the subject. If we examine the term, it implies a system where heat is produced from a central source and distributed around the whole building. The method of heat generation and distribution may vary with the type of heating system employed. Fairfield Heating is sometimes referred to as space heating. To be understood fully, this must be described by its type or system arrangement, and may be categorized as being either full, part or background heating. Full central heating may be defined as being a system of heating from a central source where all the normally habitable or used rooms/spaces are heated to achieve guaranteed temperatures under certain conditions. By today's standards, all heating systems installed in residential dwellings and most commercial buildings should conform to this category, unless there are acceptable reasons for not doing so. Partial central heating is the term applied where only part of the building is to be heated, but even then the rooms or spaces that are heated should still have guaranteed temperatures under stated conditions. This form of central heating would be a rare occurrence for a residential dwelling but it is not so uncommon for some commercial buildings especially where part of the building complex is not normally occupied. The background Fairfield Heating is used to describe a form of central heating whereby lower than normal or standard recommended temperatures are aimed at for the type of building involved. The term is sometimes used to refer to heating systems installed in buildings where the room temperatures are not guaranteed.















