Heating & Air Conditioning in Norwood, MA
All Seasons Heating & Air Conditioning handles residential and light-commercial heating and cooling across Norwood and the surrounding area. From an AC that quit in a heat wave to a furnace that won't light on the first cold night, the fastest way to get help is to call — you'll reach a local technician, not a call center.
AC installation & replacement
Properly sized new systems with load calculations, from value units to high-SEER equipment.
Seasonal tune-ups
Preventive maintenance that keeps efficiency high and catches cheap fixes early.
Furnace repair
Ignition failures, flame sensors, blower motors, and no-heat emergencies on gas and electric furnaces.
Emergency service
Urgent no-heat and no-cool calls handled fast, before small faults become failures.
Thermostat installation
Smart and programmable thermostat wiring, setup, and configuration.
Heat pump service
Install, repair, and tune-ups for air-source and cold-climate heat pumps.
Heating & Cooling in Norwood, Massachusetts
Harsh coastal winters make dependable heat the first priority around Norwood, with boilers and furnaces carrying long seasons and nor'easters testing every component. Increasingly hot, humid summers have made whole-home cooling and heat pumps the fastest-growing upgrade in the state. Local providers like All Seasons Heating & Air Conditioning understand these conditions and service equipment accordingly.
Common HVAC Problems in Norwood
AC blowing warm air
When an air conditioner runs but does not cool, common culprits include low refrigerant from a slow leak, a failed capacitor, or a dirty outdoor coil that cannot shed heat.
Short cycling
A system that starts and stops every few minutes wears out components fast. Causes range from an oversized unit to a faulty thermostat or a clogged condensate switch.
Uneven temperatures between floors
Multi-level homes often suffer hot upstairs rooms in summer. Duct adjustments, zoning dampers, or a ductless unit for the problem area are common solutions.
Frozen evaporator coil
Ice on the indoor coil chokes cooling entirely. Restricted airflow or low refrigerant are the usual causes, and running the unit while frozen risks compressor damage.
Why Choose a Local Massachusetts Company
Local technicians know the housing stock — from older homes with aging ductwork to new builds with high-efficiency systems. A provider who works these neighborhoods daily has seen your exact system and failure pattern before. Established local providers stand behind their work long after the invoice is paid.
Seasonal Tips for Massachusetts Homes
- Install a carbon monoxide detector on every floor if you heat with gas or oil, and check batteries each fall.
- Seal drafts around doors and windows — reducing heat loss lets the furnace cycle less and last longer.
- Replace the furnace filter before heating season starts — restricted airflow is the top cause of winter no-heat calls.
- Keep snow and ice cleared from heat pump outdoor units and exhaust vents to prevent shutdowns and carbon monoxide risks.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do heat pumps work in Massachusetts?
Modern cold-climate heat pumps perform well across Massachusetts's typical temperature range, and they both heat and cool. The right fit depends on your home's insulation and existing ductwork.
What are signs of duct problems?
Rooms that never reach temperature, whistling sounds, dusty air, and high bills all point to leaky or unbalanced ductwork. Sealing and balancing often deliver the biggest comfort improvement per dollar.
What size HVAC system does my home need?
Sizing depends on square footage, insulation, windows, ceiling height, and local climate — not guesswork. An oversized unit short-cycles and an undersized one never keeps up, so a proper load calculation matters.
Should I repair or replace my system?
A common rule: if the unit is past 12 years old and the repair costs more than a third of replacement, replacement usually wins. A technician can weigh age, efficiency, refrigerant type, and repair history for your specific unit.
Why is my AC running constantly in summer?
During heat waves some runtime is normal, but nonstop operation with poor cooling suggests low refrigerant, dirty coils, duct leaks, or an undersized system. A service visit can pinpoint which.
Recent Work




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