As the indoor air quality (IAQ) market continues to evolve, the industry is cutting new trails into nontraditional and much-needed HVAC markets, as exhibited at the 2005 AHR Expo.
Every year the AHR Expo has a plethora of exhibitors showing their new duct products. This year was no different, as manufacturers proudly displayed their new ducts, duct liners, duct tapes, and various duct accessories.
Unitary system diagnostics are an established fact on a few high-end systems. What benefits will drive future market acceptance? That was the question examined at an ASHRAE Winter Meeting forum, "Achieving Market Acceptance of HVAC Fault Detection and Diagnostic Systems."
The 2005 International Air-Conditioning, Heating, Refrigerating Exposition (AHR Expo) celebrated its 75th anniversary with a record number of exhibitors. This was the first time in the history of the AHR Expo that the show was held in Orlando, and, as anticipated, it attracted a large number of industry professionals from around the globe.
Receivers and reservoirs were among the newer refrigeration products on display at the 2005 International Air-Conditioning, Heating, Refrigerating Exposition (AHR Expo), where product innovations and the latest refrigerants competed for the spotlight.
Maybe it was the equipment that pulled hordes of attendees into the booths highlighting residential furnaces at the 2005 AHR Expo. Exhibitors had a whole lineup of new and exciting residential furnaces at the show.
The world of grilles, registers, and diffusers has changed remarkably in the last few years. This was evident at the AHR Expo, where manufacturers happily showed off their range of products in a variety of colors, styles, and finishes.
There was no shortage of innovative compressor technology at the 2005 AHR Expo. But the consistent message to contractors was that the industry has those wide range of products geared for HFC refrigerants - and, in one case, CO2.
There was definitely an international flair in the area of nonducted systems at the 2005 International Air-Conditioning, Heating, Refrigerating Exposition (AHR Expo). Foreign-based companies were represented in abundance.