No. Edge Comfort is a PCM thermal battery kit plus a DIY retrofit workflow. The goal is to increase comfort hours by storing coolth and buffering room heat, not to act like a compressor-based cooling system in every climate.
Clear answers for an early-stage thermal resilience product.
The first release is focused on room-level fit, pilot validation and honest performance boundaries.
We ship ultra-high-conductivity, shape-stabilised PCM cartridges and the Studio AI Hub with sensors. Furniture, fans, night-air adapters, shading and recharge equipment are either reused from your own setup or selected as partner picks.
Yes. A bench, sideboard, cabinet or simple flat-pack build can work if air can pass through the PCM bank. Studio provides cut-out templates, airflow layouts and a parts list so the furniture stays yours.
The Studio marks missing DIY parts as partner picks. You can buy the suggested category from a partner or swap in any equivalent fan, adapter, shade or recharge device that meets the airflow and capacity guidance.
Performance depends on night temperatures, humidity, solar gain, room type and whether night ventilation is possible. Studio first classifies passive charging fit as Strong, Moderate or Limited before suggesting the kit.
If night air is too warm, the AI Hub can schedule recharge from your existing AC or portable cooler during off-peak hours. If you do not have one, Studio can suggest a partner chiller category.
The roadmap uses sealed, shape-stabilised PCM cartridges designed to avoid leakage. Commercial release still requires material compliance, electrical integration checks and product safety testing before broad deployment.
That is one of the main design goals. The retrofit is low-intrusion and reversible: use furniture you own, avoid facade impact, and follow local rental rules for window adapters or small cut-outs.
It is intended to be IKEA-level DIY: a template, a parts list, simple cut-outs, a fan, PCM cartridges and Studio guidance. More complex rooms can still use installers or B2B partners.
Yes. B2B pilots use PCM kits installed into existing or partner furniture, plus Studio assessment and Monitoring Kit data to validate comfort hours, recharge percentage and resident feedback.
Yes. The cartridge platform spans a range of phase-change temperatures, including ~32°C heat-storage packs. Swap them in for the cold season and charge them during off-peak hours with a small fan heater or an air-source heat pump — they then release gentle, even warmth for hours. Either way, the PCM holds the room in a steady comfort band instead of letting temperatures swing.