The North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package is designed for students preparing for the North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam using the listed North Carolina code books, NC Board laws and rules, NASCLA business law reference, ACCA manuals, boiler law reference, and Ductulator. This package gives students organized, highlighted, and tabbed study references to support faster navigation, more focused preparation, and stronger open book exam study.
Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor preparation requires a broad understanding of North Carolina administrative code requirements, fuel gas systems, mechanical code provisions, energy conservation requirements, residential code topics, contractor laws and rules, business law, project management, commercial HVAC applications, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct system design, boiler and pressure vessel requirements, and duct-sizing practice. Students should prepare for both trade knowledge and reference navigation because contractor exam preparation can require moving between several different books and tools.
This highlighted and tabbed book package is useful for heating contractor candidates, HVAC business owners, qualifying parties, mechanical contractors, supervisors, estimators, project managers, installers, service technicians, and students preparing for a North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam. It is especially helpful for students who want organized physical books that are highlighted and tabbed before they begin serious study. The included Ductulator supports duct-sizing practice and helps students become more comfortable with airflow, velocity, friction rate, and duct design concepts.
The North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam preparation process may involve many references and subject areas. Students may need to move between North Carolina administrative material, fuel gas code provisions, mechanical code requirements, energy conservation requirements, residential code provisions, NC Board laws and rules, NASCLA business law material, ACCA load calculation manuals, duct design manuals, boiler law requirements, and the Ductulator. This package helps organize those materials so students can spend more time learning the content and less time trying to locate major sections from scratch.
Students should use this package to build a consistent preparation routine. A strong study plan may include reviewing one reference at a time, learning how each book is arranged, practicing exam-style questions, using the Ductulator regularly, and returning to the references to understand missed answers. Highlighting and tabs can support quicker lookup, but students still need repetition and familiarity with the books to use them effectively.
The North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam is connected to fuel gas systems, mechanical systems, residential code requirements, energy conservation, contractor laws and rules, business law, project management, commercial HVAC applications, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct design, boiler and pressure vessel requirements, and North Carolina administrative requirements. Students preparing with this highlighted and tabbed book package should study the listed references and practice using them together.
Students should prepare for topics related to heating equipment, fuel gas piping, combustion air, appliance venting, mechanical equipment installation, ventilation, duct systems, energy conservation, residential system provisions, residential and commercial load calculations, duct design, boiler safety, pressure vessel requirements, administrative procedures, contractor responsibilities, business operations, and project management.
Because this exam path uses many references, students should practice identifying which book applies to each question. A fuel gas piping question may point to the North Carolina Fuel Gas Code. A mechanical installation question may require the North Carolina Mechanical Code. An energy question may require the North Carolina Energy Conservation Code. A residential system question may point to the North Carolina Residential Code. A licensing or board responsibility question may point to the NC Board's Laws & Rules. A contractor business or project management question may require NASCLA Business, Law, and Project Management. A commercial application question may require Manual CS. A residential load calculation question may point to Manual J. A commercial load calculation question may require Manual N. A duct design question may point to Manual D, Manual Q, or the Ductulator. A boiler or pressure vessel question may require The Uniform Boiler and Pressure Vessel Act.
The North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam is prepared for as an open book test using approved references. This highlighted and tabbed book package is intended to help students study with the listed references in an organized way and build stronger reference-navigation habits before exam day.
Open book testing still requires serious preparation. Students must know how the books are organized, where major subjects are located, how to use indexes and tables, and how to move quickly between references. The books in this package cover North Carolina administrative provisions, fuel gas requirements, mechanical code provisions, energy conservation, residential code material, NC Board laws and rules, business law and project management, commercial HVAC applications, residential and commercial load calculations, duct system design, boiler and pressure vessel requirements, and duct-sizing practice.
A strong open book study strategy starts with topic recognition. Students should read each question carefully and decide whether the subject is fuel gas, mechanical code, residential code, energy conservation, administration, licensing rules, contractor business law, project management, commercial HVAC applications, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct system design, boiler law, pressure vessel requirements, or another heating contractor topic. After identifying the subject, students should move directly to the most relevant reference and confirm the answer from the book or tool.
The North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam may be part of a broader North Carolina contractor licensing or qualification process. Students should understand that exam preparation and book organization are only one part of reaching a licensing goal. The applicable North Carolina board or authority controls licensing requirements, applications, eligibility, experience, approvals, fees, and any additional steps required for a credential or license.
A practical preparation path for this package may include the following steps:
Some licensing paths may include additional requirements beyond the exam, such as applications, documented experience, business requirements, insurance, fees, continuing education, or board approval. Passing an exam may be one step in the process, but it may not be the only requirement. Students should complete every step required by the authority governing their license or credential.
North Carolina heating contractor requirements are controlled by the applicable state licensing authority and may vary by classification, credential, scope of work, and business structure. Students preparing for the North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam should make sure they are following the correct licensing path and using the correct references for their exam.
This highlighted and tabbed book package supports preparation by organizing the listed North Carolina code books, NC Board laws and rules, NASCLA business law reference, ACCA manuals, boiler law reference, and Ductulator. It does not replace the state application process, eligibility review, board requirements, or any official licensing step required for approval.
Students should use this package as a study and reference-navigation tool while completing any required licensing or exam registration steps. North Carolina code editions, board rules, exam procedures, and approved reference requirements can change, so students should follow the current instructions connected to their registration, examination, and licensing process.
The included books are highlighted and tabbed to support faster study and reference navigation. Students should still spend time learning each bookās structure, index, tables, diagrams, chapters, and major topic areas. Repeated use of the references during preparation helps students become more comfortable moving through the material.
North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor preparation should focus on both heating trade knowledge and the ability to use the listed references quickly. Students should review fuel gas systems, mechanical code provisions, energy conservation requirements, residential code provisions, NC Board laws and rules, business law, project management, commercial applications, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct system design, boiler and pressure vessel requirements, and Ductulator use.
Fuel gas topics should be studied using the North Carolina Fuel Gas Code. Students should review gas piping materials, pipe sizing, developed length concepts, appliance input, shutoff valves, regulators, connectors, combustion air, appliance installation, venting, testing, and safety requirements. Fuel gas questions often require careful table use and close attention to the facts in the question.
Mechanical system topics should be reviewed using the North Carolina Mechanical Code. Students should focus on equipment installation, ventilation, exhaust systems, duct systems, appliance access, clearances, condensate disposal, hydronic systems, refrigeration-related provisions where applicable, chimneys, vents, and inspection requirements. Mechanical code preparation helps students connect field conditions to enforceable code language.
Energy conservation topics should be reviewed using the North Carolina Energy Conservation Code. Students should study mechanical system efficiency concepts, duct insulation, duct sealing, controls, equipment efficiency, building envelope coordination, and related energy provisions. Energy questions may require students to locate code requirements that affect system design, installation, or inspection.
Residential code topics should be reviewed using the North Carolina Residential Code. Students should be comfortable navigating residential mechanical, fuel gas, plumbing, energy, building, and safety provisions. Heating contractor questions may connect system installation to residential conditions, so students should know how to move through this reference when needed.
Administrative code topics should be reviewed using the North Carolina Administration Code and Policies. Students should become familiar with administrative requirements, inspections, approvals, permitting concepts, enforcement procedures, code responsibilities, and policies that may affect mechanical and heating work. These topics are different from trade calculations, so they should receive separate study time.
North Carolina laws and rules should also be part of the study plan. The NC Board's Laws & Rules - 2026 Edition should be reviewed for licensing responsibilities, board requirements, contractor obligations, and regulatory language. Students should not overlook this reference because legal and administrative questions can be very different from technical HVAC questions.
Business, law, and project management topics should be reviewed using NASCLA Business, Law, and Project Management 7th Edition. Students should study contractor responsibilities, business organization, contracts, project management, estimating, bidding, financial management, accounting concepts, insurance, bonding, safety management, employment responsibilities, liens, dispute resolution, and regulatory obligations. Contractor exams often include business-focused questions that require a different study approach than trade-code questions.
Commercial applications and equipment should be reviewed using Manual CS. Students should study commercial HVAC system types, equipment applications, system design concepts, airflow, ventilation, heating equipment, cooling equipment, controls, and practical commercial system considerations. This reference supports broader commercial system understanding and helps students connect equipment knowledge to real-world applications.
Residential load calculation topics should be studied using Manual J, while commercial load calculation topics should be reviewed using Manual N. Students should become familiar with heat loss and heat gain concepts, indoor and outdoor design conditions, building envelope factors, ventilation, infiltration, internal loads, occupancy considerations, and equipment sizing principles. Load calculation preparation helps students understand how system capacity is selected and evaluated.
Duct design topics should be reviewed using Manual D, Manual Q, and the Ductulator. Students should practice duct-sizing concepts, airflow, friction rate, velocity, equivalent length, fittings, supply ducts, return ducts, residential duct design, commercial low-pressure duct design, and low-velocity duct system concepts. The Ductulator should be used during study so students become comfortable with the tool before testing.
Boiler and pressure vessel topics should be reviewed using The Uniform Boiler and Pressure Vessel Act. Students should study boiler-related requirements, pressure vessel responsibilities, inspection concepts, safety concerns, and regulatory provisions. Boiler questions may require the student to recognize when this reference applies and locate the relevant rule efficiently.
Because this package includes several references, students should avoid studying randomly. A better approach is to create topic blocks: fuel gas, mechanical code, energy code, residential code, administration, laws and rules, business law, project management, commercial systems, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct design, boiler law, and Ductulator practice. After each topic block, students should answer practice questions and return to the books to review missed answers.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare for the North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam by providing an organized highlighted and tabbed book package built around the listed North Carolina code books, NC Board laws and rules, NASCLA business law reference, ACCA manuals, boiler law reference, and Ductulator. The package supports students who want a structured set of study materials that can be used for focused review and reference-navigation practice.
The highlighted and tabbed books help students move through the references more efficiently during study. The Ductulator supports duct-sizing practice, and the range of included references helps students prepare across the major subjects connected to Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor work. Students can use the package to review trade concepts, locate key rules, practice calculations, and build stronger familiarity with the material.
For students with HVAC, heating, fuel gas, duct design, boiler, service, installation, contracting, or mechanical experience, this package helps connect hands-on trade knowledge to exam-style reference questions. For students newer to exam preparation, the organized book package helps make a large reference list feel more manageable. The goal is to help students become more organized, more confident, and more comfortable using the materials provided.
1 Exam Prep supports students through organized study materials, trade-focused review, reference navigation, Ductulator practice, business law review, project management review, boiler reference review, and confidence-building study structure. This package does not guarantee a passing score, licensing approval, employment, business approval, or any specific exam outcome, but it gives students a more organized way to prepare for the North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam.
This package includes highlighted and tabbed copies of North Carolina Administration Code and Policies, 2018 Edition; North Carolina Fuel Gas Code, 2018 Edition; North Carolina Mechanical Code, 2018 Edition; North Carolina Energy Conservation Code, 2018 Edition; North Carolina Residential Code, 2018 Edition; NC Board's Laws & Rules - 2026 Edition; NASCLA Business, Law, and Project Management 7th Edition; Manual CS; Manual J; Manual N; Manual Q; Manual D; The Uniform Boiler and Pressure Vessel Act; and a Ductulator.
Yes. The books included in this package are highlighted and tabbed to support faster study and reference navigation.
Yes. This package includes a Ductulator for duct-sizing practice.
Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted book package orders.
This product is a highlighted and tabbed book package. The included items are the listed books and Ductulator.
Yes. This package is designed to support study for the North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam by organizing the listed references for easier review and navigation.
Students should study North Carolina administrative code, fuel gas code, mechanical code, energy conservation code, residential code, NC Board laws and rules, NASCLA business law and project management, commercial HVAC applications, residential load calculations, commercial load calculations, duct system design, boiler and pressure vessel requirements, and Ductulator use.
The exam is prepared for as an open book test using approved references. Students should practice with the listed books, tabs, highlighting, and Ductulator while following current exam-day rules for approved materials and tools.
This package is useful for heating contractor candidates, HVAC business owners, qualifying parties, mechanical contractors, supervisors, estimators, project managers, installers, service technicians, and students preparing for a North Carolina Heating Group 1, Class 1 Contractor exam.
No. This package supports exam preparation through highlighted and tabbed references, Ductulator practice, organized study materials, business law review, and boiler reference review, but it does not guarantee a passing score, licensing approval, employment, business approval, or any specific exam outcome.