All Climat display & sales centres will be closed throughout the Christmas break between 12:00pm 24th December – 9am 2nd January 2025. For air conditioning assistance through this time, please contact your air conditioning system manufacturer directly.
All Climat display & sales centres will be closed throughout the Christmas break between 12:00pm 24th December – 9am 2nd January 2025. For air conditioning assistance through this time, please contact your air conditioning system manufacturer directly.
There is a moment when a house is no longer a set of rooms and starts to feel like one, continuous space. Temperature has more to do with it than most people realise. When every room is at a comfortable
Most homes in Australia face extreme seasons, making separate heating and cooling systems cumbersome. A single reverse-cycle ducted system simplifies climate control, efficiently covering both needs. But that’s not really how modern households work anymore. If you want one system
If you’ve ever tried to sleep through an Adelaide summer night—or sat through a Monday morning work call wrapped in a blanket—you already know the problem with staying comfortable. Adelaide’s weather doesn’t do subtle. And one week it is 42
There’s something genuinely satisfying about walking into a perfectly comfortable room on a 38-degree Adelaide afternoon. Not the whole house necessarily—just that one room where you’ve been spending most of your time. That’s exactly the kind of targeted, flexible comfort
Some homes just feel right. You walk in on a 38-degree January afternoon, and it’s cool without being cold. You return on a winter night, and it’s warm without being stuffy. The temperature barely registers because you’re ignoring it. Then
Most homeowners assume that bigger is always better when it comes to cooling. Get the largest ducted system you can afford, cover the whole house, and you’re set. That’s the logic, anyway. But here’s what actually happens: oversized systems short-cycle,