Homeowners want to know why the upstairs is always 5–8 degrees hotter than the main floor and whether zoning actually fixes it or just moves the problem. A website that explains bypass damper design and zone control logic earns the installation call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For HVAC Zoning in KC
Web Design for HVAC Zoning Companies in Kansas City
HVAC zoning customers are homeowners with a two-story KC home where the upstairs bedrooms are 6–10°F hotter than the main floor in summer (heat rises, roof load on upper floor), homeowners who added a room addition that cannot be kept comfortable without overcooling the rest of the house, or homeowners with a finished basement that stays too cold in winter while the main floor overheats. The central education is how zone dampers work and why bypass design matters: a zoned system divides the duct system into independently controlled sections using motorized zone dampers (Honeywell, Carrier, EWC Controls) — each zone has its own thermostat and calls the system independently. The critical design challenge is managing static pressure: when only one zone calls, all airflow is forced through a fraction of the duct system — without a bypass, static pressure spikes, the blower over-works, airflow velocity increases noise and reduces comfort. Bypass damper design: a bypass duct connects the main supply plenum to the return plenum and opens when system static pressure exceeds the set point — correctly sized bypass is 50–75% of the largest zone capacity; an undersized bypass causes high static pressure damage to the blower; an oversized bypass causes short-cycling by returning conditioned air to the unit without delivering it to any zone. Zone control board: the zone control board (Honeywell TrueZone, EWC ZC-SYSII) coordinates thermostat calls, opens and closes dampers, and signals the equipment to run — it also manages the bypass damper based on pressure differential. Two-story vs. one-story zoning: a two-story home can achieve true comfort with upper/lower zoning if the duct system has adequate supply in each zone and returns are properly balanced — if the existing duct system was undersized for the upper floor, zoning redistributes rather than fixes the underlying duct problem. Mini-split alternative: for a single problem room (sun-facing bedroom, room addition), a single-zone mini-split may be more cost-effective than a full zoning retrofit — the website should explain when each approach is appropriate. An HVAC zoning website that explains bypass damper design, why static pressure management is the critical variable, and when zoning solves the problem vs. when duct work is the real fix earns the homeowner who has already heard that zoning will fix their upstairs.
What homeowners research before installing HVAC zoning
- How zone dampers work — motorized damper operation, thermostat-to-damper-to-equipment control sequence
- Bypass damper design — why static pressure management is critical, bypass sizing rules
- Two-story zoning — whether upper/lower zoning fixes roof load issues or just redistributes duct problems
- Zone control board — how the board coordinates dampers and equipment, Honeywell vs. EWC
- Zoning vs. mini-split — when each approach makes more sense for a single hot or cold room
What your HVAC zoning website would include
- Zone damper section — motorized damper types, how zone call sequences work from thermostat to equipment
- Bypass damper explainer — static pressure problem, bypass sizing, undersized vs. oversized bypass symptoms
- Two-story home section — roof load impact, upper/lower zone design, duct balance requirements
- Zone control board section — board function, brand comparison, how to diagnose a failed board
- Zoning vs. mini-split comparison — cost comparison, when each approach is right, hybrid solutions
- Quote form with home floors, number of zones desired, current comfort complaints, existing duct type
What clients say
“The upstairs-hot problem is the most common comfort complaint in two-story KC homes, and every customer comes in thinking zoning is the answer. The website section on bypass damper design — and what happens to static pressure when you close half the duct system without one — turned the conversation from 'will this fix it' to 'what does the bypass need to be sized at.' I also stopped losing jobs to competitors who proposed zoning when the real problem was undersized upstairs supply runs: the website set the expectation that I would evaluate the duct system first, not just install dampers and call it done.”
— F. Allard, HVAC zoning and duct design, Lenexa, KS
Simple pricing
An HVAC zoning site with zone damper section, bypass explainer, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with two-story design section, zone board content, and zoning vs. mini-split comparison is $425–$750. One zoning installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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