Posted by sotxbill on March 23, 2017 at 07:45:03 from (104.5.24.112):
In Reply to: Home heat pump posted by sandel on March 21, 2017 at 19:58:15:
If you have ng.. then your have a better solution...
but if you dont... I live in an all electric area, an have had several heatpumps.. and they save me $65 to $125 a month. The newer superduper model is totally computer controlled.. so it actually throw the contacts on the compressor exactly when the ac wave is at zero, to minimize contact failure.. It has true variable speed fans, so that the compressor starts first, and after that surge is over, then the fan kicks in slowly and ramps up. It makes it a soft start, as the starting is a huge consumption of power. The fans run at very slow speeds when needed to lower the humidity and keeps the house at 55% instead of the normal 65% or higher, so the heat and cooling actually feel better at the same temperature. In light days, the compressor and fans both run at reduced loads to give you futher savings. Once a year, I get an error after a thunder storm and have to cycle the power, to reboot the outside unit as the computer is confused and the intelligent thermostat cant talk to it. I also live in the south so the backup has only come on once or twice in 5 years.
SEER is not EER.. If you live in extremes the EER is always more indictive of what your unit will do. As here we dont have many "light" days of cooling or heating, it ether cold as heck or hotter than hellp.
Also,, heat pumps do not deliver blazing hot temps out of the ducts like a gas furnace. The thermo cycle will deliver a heating or cooling temp of about 18 to 22 degrees over the current temp of the house, so a lot of folks incorrectly assume its not working or efficient, but this is NOT true.
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