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About air zones
A Climate Cŏntrol™ Network System generally contains one or more air zones, based on
the types of heating, cooling, ventilation, and other equipment installed in your home. For
example, if your home uses forced air heating, all the rooms affected by the furnace are
included in a single air zone. This means that you can conveniently and easily adjust the
temperature and other settings for all the rooms in the zone. See
Your system may have several thermostats within an air zone. If so, one thermostat is considered the primary
thermostat, and it controls the temperature in all the rooms in the zone.
You can select which thermostat is primary based on rooms where you spend the most time. For example, if you
spend much of your time in the morning in the kitchen, you might want to set the thermostat in the kitchen as your
primary thermostat. But in the evening, when you move into the lounge, you might want to set that thermostat as
the primary.
You can also choose to make some thermostats never the primary thermostat. For example, you might not want a
child to adjust the room temperature, and so you would set the thermostat in the child's room to never be the
primary. See
Make a thermostat the primary thermostat for an air zone
You can also adjust the fan and ventilation settings, change the heat or cool mode, the relative humidity, and the
zone description. See
Use fan and ventilation settings
, and
Note:
The
Air Zones
tab and all related Air Zone features only appear for systems that contain air zones. Some
systems do not contain air zones.