Heating Solutions for Agricultural Buildings

For poultry houses, some pig houses, greenhouses and other agricultural buildings, with direct-fired warm air, indirect-fired warm air and radiant heating paths to support warm-up speed, air distribution and operating stability.

Heating Paths for Poultry Houses
Some Pig Houses and Other Agricultural Buildings

Direct-Fired Warm Air


Suitable for agricultural projects that prioritize fast warm-up, system directness and investment efficiency.
Recommended: KWFP / KWDHVS

Indirect-Fired Warm Air

Suitable for agricultural projects that care more about air quality, warm-air quality and long-term operating stability.
Recommended: KWIH / AH

Radiant Heating


Suitable for projects that prioritize zone heating, high-space heat logic and reduced upper-space heat loss.
Recommended: LTSA

Agricultural Products

Poultry houses, greenhouses, and some pig houses differ significantly in heat recovery speed, air cleanliness requirements,installation methods, and zoned heating logic. Therefore, the appropriate product solutions are also different. 
(Click product names for more information.)

Direct-fired warm air heater, suitable for agricultural buildings such as chicken coops and greenhouses where rapid heating is needed. Its characteristics are direct heating, a simple system, relatively economical investment, suitable for standardized batch projects and scenarios that require quick temperature recovery.

Direct-fired warm air heating solutions for livestock and poultry houses are suitable for agricultural buildings such as poultry houses. They are ideal for projects emphasizing rapid heating, compact equipment layout, and large-scale replication, and are commonly used for winter heating in standardized farming buildings.

Indirect-fired poultry house warm air heaters are suitable for poultry projects with higher air cleanliness requirements. Combustion and airflow are separated, making them ideal for agricultural buildings that prioritize clean heated air, operational stability, and long-term performance.

Agricultural indirect-fired warm air heaters are suitable for centralized warm air heating in greenhouses and certain agricultural buildings. They are ideal for applications requiring stable airflow, large-area coverage, and clearer air circulation management.

Low-intensity tube radiant heating solutions for agriculture are suitable for poultry houses. They are ideal for agricultural applications seeking radiant heating methods, reduced upper heat loss, and enhanced zoned heating strategies.

Application Scenarios

Poultry Houses
Pig Houses
Greenhouses

Suitable for broiler houses, layer houses, and brooding buildings, focusing on heat recovery speed, temperature uniformity, airflow organization, and stable winter operation. Common series: KWFP / KWDHVS /  KWIH / LTSA

Suitable for nursery and finishing pig houses, focusing on continuous heating capability, equipment layout adaptability, airflow organization, and operational convenience. Common series: AH / selected indirect-fired solutions / LTSA

Suitable for flower, fruit, vegetable, and controlled agriculture greenhouses, focusing on warm air coverage, heat recovery efficiency, environmental adaptability, and maintenance convenience.
Common series: KWFP / AH / LTSA

When Should Agricultural Projects Prioritize
Direct-Fired, Indirect-Fired or Radiant Heating?

Prioritize KWFP

When projects mainly involve poultry houses or greenhouses and prioritize rapid heating, direct systems, and economical investment, KWFP is recommended first.

Prioritize KWDHVS

When projects focus on standardized poultry houses and prioritize suitable in-house equipment layout, rapid heating, and scalable replication, KWDHVS is recommended first.

Prioritize KWIH

When projects place greater emphasis on air cleanliness, separation of combustion and airflow, and long-term operational stability, KWIH is recommended first.

Prioritize AH

When projects are more greenhouse-oriented or require wider and more stable airflow coverage, indirect-fired solutions such as AH can be further evaluated.

Prioritize LTSA

When projects prioritize zoned heating logic, reduced upper heat loss, and radiant heating methods, LTSA is recommended first.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the main difference between direct-fired and indirect-fired systems?

A: Direct-fired systems provide more direct and faster heating, making them suitable for applications emphasizing efficiency and investment economy. Indirect-fired systems separate combustion from airflow, making them more suitable for projects requiring higher air cleanliness and long-term operational quality.

Q: Should poultry houses, pig houses, and greenhouses use the same equipment?

A: Simple standardization is not recommended. Different agricultural buildings vary significantly in heating speed, air cleanliness, installation methods, and space organization, so the appropriate heating solution should be selected according to building type and operating requirements.

Q: Is indirect-fired always better than direct-fired?


A
: No. Indirect-fired systems are not “absolutely better”; they are simply more suitable for certain applications requiring higher air cleanliness and airflow quality. The final choice should depend on project requirements rather than equipment classification alone.

Q: Are installation height and installation position important for agricultural warm air heaters?

A: Yes, they are very important. Installation height, airflow direction, equipment quantity, and building structure all affect temperature uniformity, heat recovery efficiency, and operational performance, so layouts should be designed according to the specific building.

Q: If I prioritize heating recovery speed, what should I evaluate first?


A
: The first consideration should be whether the heating method suits the building type, followed by evaluation of building size, insulation conditions, fuel availability, and target temperature. Evaluating only the equipment model is usually insufficient.

Q: I am still unsure which agricultural heating solution to choose. What information should I provide first?

A: Product comparison materials, one-page introductions, manual request access, and basic technical documents can be provided according to project requirements to help customers complete preliminary selection and solution discussions more efficiently.

Documentation and Technical Support

For further comparison of different agricultural models or project discussions, related materials and technical support are available upon request

Request Product Comparison Materials

Used for quickly comparing the application focus of KWFP, KWDHVS, KWIH, AH, LTSA, and other series

Request Manuals & Technical Documentation

Used for further understanding of installation, operation, and project coordination information

Fault Diagnosis Tool

Quickly locate common problems based on device phenomena to help improve troubleshooting efficiency.

Selection Tool

According to the building conditions and application requirements, quickly determine the more suitable heating solutions and product directions

Contact Us

Project Consultation & Business Cooperation

Please provide the application type, building dimensions, fuel conditions, and target region. We can help recommend the most suitable heating solution and provide technical parameters, drawings, and technical documentation according to project requirements.

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