HVAC Glossary
The terms you'll hear from a technician, a diagnosis, or a spec sheet — explained in plain English.
- AFUE
- Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency — the percentage of fuel a furnace converts to heat. A 95% AFUE furnace turns 95% of its gas into usable heat.
- Air Handler
- The indoor unit that houses the blower and, on a heat pump system, the indoor coil — pairs with an outdoor condenser.
- Blower Motor
- The fan motor that pushes conditioned air through your ductwork and out the vents.
- BTU
- British Thermal Unit — the standard measure of heating or cooling capacity. One ton of cooling equals 12,000 BTU/hour.
- Capacitor
- A component that stores electrical charge to help start and run the compressor and fan motors. A leading cause of "won't start" and "clicking" symptoms when it fails.
- Compressor
- The component in the outdoor unit that pressurizes refrigerant, driving the entire cooling cycle. Often the most expensive part to replace.
- Condensate Drain
- The pipe that carries water condensation away from the indoor coil. Clogs are a common cause of leaks and system shutoffs.
- Condenser Coil
- The outdoor coil that releases heat collected from inside the house into the outside air.
- Contactor
- An electrically controlled relay switch that sends power to the compressor and outdoor fan when the thermostat calls for cooling.
- Damper
- A movable plate inside ductwork that regulates or redirects airflow, often used in zoned systems.
- Defrost Cycle
- A brief reversal a heat pump runs in cold weather to melt ice off the outdoor coil — normal, and shouldn't be mistaken for a malfunction if brief.
- Ductwork
- The network of metal or flexible tubes distributing conditioned air from the system to each room.
- Evaporator Coil
- The indoor coil where refrigerant absorbs heat from your home's air, cooling it before it's distributed.
- Filter Drier
- A component in the refrigerant line that removes moisture and debris — replaced during major refrigerant repairs.
- Heat Exchanger
- The component inside a furnace that transfers heat from combustion gases to the air stream without mixing them. A cracked heat exchanger is a carbon monoxide hazard.
- Heat Pump
- A system that moves heat rather than generating it, capable of both heating and cooling by reversing its refrigerant flow.
- HSPF
- Heating Seasonal Performance Factor — the efficiency rating for a heat pump's heating mode, similar in purpose to SEER for cooling.
- Limit Switch
- A furnace safety switch that shuts off heating elements or the burner if temperatures rise too high, often triggered by restricted airflow.
- MERV Rating
- Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value — measures how well an air filter captures particles. Higher isn't always better; very high MERV filters can restrict airflow on some systems.
- Package Unit
- An all-in-one system with the compressor, coils, and blower in a single outdoor cabinet, common on homes without basement or attic space for an air handler.
- Plenum
- The main box connecting the air handler or furnace to the branching ductwork.
- Refrigerant
- The chemical (commonly R-410A in modern systems) that cycles between liquid and gas to move heat. Regulated under EPA Section 608; not a DIY-handled substance.
- Reversing Valve
- The component on a heat pump that switches refrigerant flow direction to change between heating and cooling modes.
- SEER / SEER2
- Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio — the cooling efficiency rating of an AC or heat pump. SEER2 is the updated testing standard used on newer equipment.
- Sequencer
- A timed relay in electric furnaces that brings heating elements online one at a time rather than all at once.
- Short Cycling
- When a system turns on and off far more often than normal, wasting energy and wearing out components — usually a sign of an underlying restriction or oversized equipment.
- Split System
- The most common residential setup: an outdoor condenser paired with an indoor air handler or furnace, connected by refrigerant lines.
- Static Pressure
- The resistance to airflow inside your ductwork — too high, and the blower struggles to move air, often from restrictive filters or undersized ducts.
- Subcooling
- A refrigerant measurement technicians use, alongside superheat, to confirm a system has the correct refrigerant charge.
- Superheat
- A refrigerant temperature measurement technicians use to diagnose charge levels and airflow issues — part of a standard service check, not a DIY reading.
- Thermostat
- The control that reads room temperature and signals the system to heat, cool, or idle.
- Ton (of cooling)
- A unit of cooling capacity equal to 12,000 BTU/hour — residential systems typically range from 1.5 to 5 tons.
- TXV (Thermostatic Expansion Valve)
- A metering device that regulates refrigerant flow into the evaporator coil, adjusting to load conditions in real time.
- Zoning
- A ductwork setup using dampers and multiple thermostats to condition different areas of a home independently.