This bundle of courses is follows the structure of John Siegenthaler's textbook, "Modern Hydronic Heating & Cooling: For Residential and Light Commercial Buildings".
This is a series of professional development training courses for HVAC engineers, contractors, project managers, and building owners. Learn to design and install heat pump systems with confidence.
This is a rare opportunity to take an advanced hydronic design course with John Siegenthaler. Learn to design state-of-the-art systems that deliver comfort, efficiency, and reliability.
This course introduces the technology used in modern air-to-water heat pumps and shows how to build complete systems around them.
If you only take one heat pump training in your life, this is the one. Instructor John Siegenthaler wants this course to be your launching off point for more specialized heat pump training you will find in other courses.
In other courses we talk a lot about hydronic heating. This course is about using chilled water to provide cooling - you'll learn how these systems work, situations to avoid, and see some example systems.
The NYS Clean Heat Program provides incentives for participating heat pump installers. You need to complete two courses in order to participate and this is a bundle of both of them.
This advanced course for HVAC engineers, salespeople and technicians builds on the "Air-to-Water Heat Pump Fundamentals" course.* You'll learn the technical performance and installation details for air-to-water heat pump systems.
This course explains the how hydronic heat emitters & distribution systems for heat pumps work. We'll dive into the weeds and look at example systems. It was designed for HVAC engineers, salespeople, and technicians.
This course describes specific types and applications for air-to-water heat pumps for space heating and cooling in combination with hydronic distribution system.
“Heat Pumps 101” is a free course from John Siegenthaler. It takes less than an hour to complete. You’ll learn the very basics of heat pump technology, including heat transfer, refrigeration, and what applications are commonly used.
According to John Siegenthaler, The future of hydronic heating is low water temperature-- necessary to optimize the performance of condensing boilers, heat pumps, and solar thermal collectors.
In this lecture, hydronics expert John Siegenthaler explains the importance of low water temperature heat emitters and distribution designs in modern hydronic systems.
This lecture will outline 4 different methods for providing hydraulic separation, some of which may reduce the installation and operating cost of a system.
The use of technology such as cookies allows HeatSpring to operate and improve the functionality of our website and derive insights about our audience.
You can read more about our privacy policy here.