Heat pumps can’t take the cold? Nordics debunk the myth::By installing a heat pump in his house in the hills of Oslo, Oyvind Solstad killed three birds with one stone, improving his comfort, finances and climate footprint.

  • @[email protected]
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    1041 year ago

    It never ceases to amaze me how people don’t read past the title 🤦 There are people debating about -10 to -30C when the article clearly states that it works in those temperatures. Not only does it work, it’s twice as efficient as electrical heating at those temperatures.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      I think it does, and it seems to work because of a defrosting feature that earlier models didn’t have. But I wouldn’t say it does so very clearly. Unless I missed it.

      • @[email protected]
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        261 year ago

        Electric heat is not always 99.9% efficient, resistive heating is.

        Heat pumps are more than 100% efficient(compared to resistive heating)

        It’s not bs, because we are moving heat, not creating it. You thinking it is bullshit will not change the laws of thermodynamics. Try to think about it this way.

        “Cold” is a made up human concept, it really is a lack of heat energy. The coldest is 0K, but even a Midwest winter is waaaaaay above that. Heat pumps (and all refrigerant-based systems) work by changing the phase of the refrigerant from liquid to gas to cool, or by compressing a gas to a liquid. This phase change takes energy from the surrounding air (think about computer duster, the can gets cold) and then pipes it inside, where it can be compressed to release the heat it just picked up from outside. In the summer you flip the reverse switch to cool your house.

        Here is an explanation from someone much more eloquent than myself:https://youtu.be/7J52mDjZzto?si=sYlNlpvGnJs16lwk

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I just don’t buy this twice as efficient bullshit.

        Do you understand how heat pumps work? The heat you’re drawing on is the the heat of the outside compartment on the outside, therefore the heat moved to the inside can be more than just the heat equivalent of the electric energy you put in. That’s how these achieve more than 100% efficiency, in general. In fact if the outside isn’t so cold outside they can achieve 300%-500%.

        Now the trick to moving heat from a cold outside compartment to a warmer inside compartment lies in the compression. If you draw even a moderate amount of heat energy into your medium, then compress it, it will turn quite hot allowing you to dump heat into your warm inside compartment. Then as the medium flows out you let it expand and it turns really cold, cold enough that it can draw in heat from the cold outside. But the lower the difference in temperature of the outside air to your expanded medium gets the less heat you can transport per unit of time, that’s why we’re only looking at 200% here.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          You also have the waste heat being converted into useful heat, which only helps the efficiency. A standard resistive heater is almost all waste heat, so if you can use some of that energy to get more heat from elsewhere, that’s how you can get 100%+ heat efficiency.

      • Cethin
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        91 year ago

        So you’d rather trust your feelings? Just loon into it if you’re that skeptical.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        “at those temperatures”

        well, to a heat pump even -40° is still 230K, which is plenty of energy to move around and work with. It may be cold to you, but to a heat pump it’s not.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Don’t you just love it when people decide things are true because they feel it’s true?

  • Overzeetop
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    901 year ago

    Good Lord - $2600 for a whole house system? I think that’s what my local (mid-Atlantic US) HVAC shop is getting for a single-room mini-split.

    Wait until people find out about ground-source heat pumps and water heater heat pumps. What you get out of those is more consistent year round, too. It’s almost like leveraging technology has benefits over just burning carbon and hydrogen to make heat.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 year ago

      2600 is dirt cheap even by Euro standards, trust me.

      Here in Italy a single room split would cost you around 1k to 2.5-3k depending on the brand.

      A whole house system you’re probably looking at 10k and then some.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        That is absolutely bonkers. I put one in myself for my one room garage that I converted to a place to hang. Cost 720$ after tax for a Pioneer mini split. It’s entering its third year in use and I love it. That being said, I wouldn’t be so risky as to put my own in when its task was heating or cooling my home. Just my garage is my problem, the rest is my family, and so I paid. But I got a whole home solution, two floors, Carrier units, for about $15k.

        I believe what you’re looking for is out there and not ridiculous price.

      • Calavera
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        31 year ago

        The guy you quoted just want to make his monthly paycheck on you alone, because that’s way over anything reasonable

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Also in rural America. How did you get someone not to laugh at you when you asked? God I fucking hate the small mindedness around me, but I couldn’t stand the city either. I cannot find someone to put one in my house so I’m going to have to install it myself next summer.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      $2600 is utter bullshit. I had several quotes for a 1000sf house, not a single one was under 16000 installed, after rebates. My payback period was going to be almost 20 years even against a medium efficiency gas furnace.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        And this is why the comments here miss the point- sure, heat pumps nowadays can work that low but in a lot of places the payoff period is well outside what anyone is looking at.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Yeah, no. German here, if your house already is all prepared, ideally with large radiators or heated floors and you really just have to switch out the source of heat from whatever to a heatpump, then you’re maybe looking at 15k€ including work. The man probably collected a properly dimensioned subsidy.

      • Nobsi
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        101 year ago

        You’re just repeating what all the gas installers keeep repeating so they don’t lose business.
        Every House built after 1990 or houses that have had insulation makovers in the past 20 years are perfectly fine to heat with a heatpump.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          Yeah, I know, I have a heatpump. However, it’s just working so well at about a COP 1:4 at the moment because I’ve got flow temperatures of less than 30°C due to heated floors. If I needed 50°C I’d be down to about 1:2.5 right now and that’s not cost saving anymore compared to gas.

          And I’ve checked, my exact model costs about 13k€ right now, make that 2k€ installation costs and we’re not far off.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      Half of my house was 8k, the other side I’m planning to install myself because I don’t have that kind of money just waiting to be spent anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I don’t think Geothermal makes much sense unless you live in one of the extremes, mainly the cold one, For example I an from Slovakia and I don’t think the temperature here went under -20C in the last few years, I barely remember any days going under - 10C, so you would be paying quite a premium for a geothermal heat pump for rather marginal gains, it would certainly need quite a good analysis if the difference in performance would ever pay for the price difference, especially with better insulation and heat recuperation systems becoming mandatory.

      There are also things like heat pump based driers now on the market btw.

      • Overzeetop
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        31 year ago

        I suspect it’s mostly a function of mass availability. Even here in the states ground source heatpumps are rare, even though the systems are more reliable (since there is no equipment exposed to weather) and a shallow borehole isn’t excessively expensive.

        I’d forgotten about heat pump clothes dryers. Those are fascinating, and really interesting for older buildings or locations without close access to exterior venting.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Shallow geothermal is basically dead in most of the world because it’s too much hit and miss, the geology is simply too complex and involved (and underground) to predict. There’s also a fuckton of issues with water ingress, minerals that like to expand when getting wet and such. You can’t really take Iceland as an example for countries not straddling a continental rift.

        Deep geothermal is utterly reliable but for the longest time drilling that deep was just too expensive. Plasma deep drilling is a solution but it’s still in its infancy.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Yeah similar in the UK. £3k for a single room mini split. £6k for a two room, etc. There’s no way you’re doing a whole house for less than bend-over money.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Wow that’s really pricey. Here in Malaysia a 2 HP mini split with inverter costs roughly RM 2400 including installation (around $500).

      Granted the average salary here is much lower but it’s amazing how much the prices differ given that they all basically come from the same factory.

  • @[email protected]
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    631 year ago

    Hell yeah, we’ve got a heat pump and we’re in Canada where it can get to -40°C (which is coincidentally also -40°F) and that thing works like a beast. Fortunately we also have the cheapest electricity in North America so the decision was easy.

    • Chetzemoka
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      251 year ago

      Electricity monopoly in the US = they can price gouge, and this is literally the only reason I installed a dual fuel system with a less efficient heat pump. The Eversource electricity price hikes last year probably would have meant I couldn’t afford to heat my home in the worst parts of winter here in Massachusetts.

      This is how policies are killing the planet. Socialize electric utilities, upgrade the electric grid, subsidize the use of electric heat pumps so they’re actually affordable for all end users, and of course more people would adopt them.

      As it is, I run my heat pump as much as I can, which is like 9 months a year. Better than only having gas heat at least.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        The US has some of the lowest electricity prices in the world though. Only a couple pennies per kWh higher than Canada. And MUCH lower than pretty much all of Europe.

        In 2020 (last year I could find from Canada specifically) Canada averaged 11.25¢ per kWh. The US averaged 13.04¢. The UK averaged 21.91¢, France averaged 19.91¢, Finland 20.56¢, Spain 28.77¢, and Germany 33.39¢.

        https://www.electricity.ca/knowledge-centre/the-grid/customer/electricity-rates/

        It’s more that Canada uses a LOT of hydro power which is cheap.

        • Chetzemoka
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          21 year ago

          This is the problem I’m facing though:

          https://www.wbur.org/news/2022/11/18/eversource-western-massachusetts-electricity-rates-hike-2022-2023-winter

          Our electric rates went from 18¢ to 25¢ last winter with no warning. It’s not that our prices are particularly high for now, but rather that they’re unreliable. I didn’t feel secure installing an electric only system because of this, even though I could have gotten a more efficient system. The dual fuel allows me to toggle between the two as needed, which feels like the safer option for the next 15-30 years that I expect to have this thing.

          Sucks because I’d really prefer to have one of those Mitsubishi hyperheat systems. But even with the less efficient system, I’m running in heat pump only mode in the to 0⁰C nights we’re seeing right now and it’s fine.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            You made the most sensible choice and are dramatically reducing you gas use, so you should feel good about that! I have a new Mitsu hyper heat (Colorado here), but recognize it wasn’t the most cost effective system and ultimately just really wanted it. It’s bonkers how well it work though. We’ve only hit 10F this last weekend but it didn’t skip a beat. Looking forward to -10F. For most people, keeping a gas furnace for a few weeks a year, and using a smaller heat pump than you would spec if only using a HP makes a lot of sense. You’re not missing much (and some would argue that peak winter demand in an electrifying world is a big problem that has backup gives us more time to solve anyway).

            • Chetzemoka
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              21 year ago

              Yeah, you did exactly what I wanted to do haha. I just love the Mitsu products so much. I had Mitsu mini-splits when I lived down in the Caribbean, and I’m a complete convert. I did install a supplemental Mitsu mini-split in the largest room in my house, which actually is so god damned efficient, it reduces the load on the central heat pump. The two combined get me through a really reasonable portion of the year. Those things are just amazing.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      What’s your heat pump? I’ve been looking into them and I can’t find one that’s willing to say it works past about -15.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        The Mitsubishi Hyper heat can work down to -13F, The absolutely best resource I’ve found for heat pump research is the NEEP database which will you give you actual BTU outputs at various ambient temperature readings: https://ashp.neep.org/#!/product_list/
         Also worth considering a geothermal heat pump depending on your geography, as then you have a guarantee of efficiency all year round

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Second the NEEP database. I’d just add that the lowest temps listed here aren’t the actual equipment minimums - each model has a cutoff temp where it will literally shit the bed (except ground source of course). For my mistu hyper heat, it’s -26F. Capacity will keep dropping after -13F though (where it’s still at like 80% I think).

    • @[email protected]
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      -51 year ago

      Can you just start saying “America” that way it includes south America and Central America, also?

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        When the context is involving climate, electricity rates, and money, there is little overlap between all of the Americas. It makes sense to tighten it down to the top half (more similar climates, etc) or bottom half (electricity rates for example). Canada has the wealth and the electricity rates to make heat pumps extremely viable, and for the most part climate too. The USA shares a lot of this. The Central/South Americas do not overlap like this with Canada.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        But that wouldn’t be accurate because there are South American countries with even cheaper electricity than here, so it’s only the cheapest in North America.

        Also not to be too pedantic but central America isn’t technically a continent, and it all falls under North America anyways.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    It depends on the model (and the price), I’m in Québec where we have -30°C (-22F) about every winter, my heatpump is mid-range, and works fine until -20C (-4F) so 95% of the time. It is set to 23C (73F) and it’s between 21-23 everywhere in the house. The electric baseboard are set to 21C (70F) as backup.

    So yeah, heat pumps can works great in winter, no problem.

    Also as written in the article, with defrosting and variable speed compressors, it is very efficient. Mine is Energy Star compliant, and act as air conditionner in summer.

    • @[email protected]
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      -111 year ago

      Makes sense to me that they could theoretically work all the way down to near 0 kelvin, just depends on their efficiency. Just so long as there is heat to be had…

      Also, not sure energy star really means much.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 year ago

        They theoretically could, but the coefficient of performance would go below 1 long before you get close to zero Kelvin. That means it would cost more energy to pump the heat than is pumped, so you’d be better off using an electric heater.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          Not to mention, you’d need a material to pump. R-32 which I believe is the most common at the moment, has a freezing temp of -132, meaning it would be useless at temps near 1K.

        • @[email protected]
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          -11 year ago

          Ah yes… that’s a very good point. I’m not about to learn a bunch of chemistry and physics and stuff… but I’d be interested in reading about this theoretical optimization if electricity was free, there was no gravity, friction was 0, etc etc etc.

  • Obinice
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    411 year ago

    How is this a myth? Nobody with more than two braincells thinks that heat pump heaters don’t work in the cold.

    If we start comparing everything that idiots think to a mythological mystery worthy of note, we’ll be here for an eternity.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      This is not a myth but a fact, heat pumps don’t work at extreme cold temperatures.
      What temperature exactly depends on the coolant used.

      The efficiency also degrades at lower temperatures.

      This is a random example of first hit I got on a heat pump.
      https://heatnow.dk/produkt/altech-sirius-9-varmepumpe/

      Notice the effect drops dramatically below -20 C°.

      But this is a pump sold for the Scandinavian market, therefore it is of course designed to work at low temperatures. It doesn’t state the minimum, but I’m guessing it would be around -40 C°. Which is very good compared top older models.

      • @[email protected]
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        -51 year ago

        But that’s not sufficient. As the temperature gets colder, it’s not just less efficient but produces much less heat. At the lower temperatures, it may not be able to keep up. Since it would be wasteful most of the year, heat pumps aren’t sized for that

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          IDK why you are downvoted, this is exactly true. The pump can only use it’s max power, and at max efficiency it generates 4-5 times that power in heat. But at temperatures below what the coolant allow, it only produce heat equivalent to the power put in, or a 4th to a 5th it’s max output.

          Meaning the pump gets less efficient as it gets colder, and potentially will not be able to keep up in extreme conditions. As output goes down at lower temperatures, the same time demand for more heat increases.

          The Heat pump shown however, does go very low, and it would be exceptional if the limit was reached. But just a decade ago, most heat pumps couldn’t go nearly that low, and lost efficiency quickly already below zero Celsius.

          Despite that, the advantages with the newer heat pumps are still big enough for it to make good sense to switch to it for most, even Scandinavians.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Here in New England as far as I can tell, HVAC contractors tend to recommend hybrid systems, with a gas furnace as the secondary heat. However maybe that’s because gas is much cheaper than electricity.

            Maybe there’s a contractor around who can give a better opinion on whether my experience is general

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              I never heard about that, here it’s very extreme if it’s below -20 C°, and new heat pumps can handle that, and remain pretty efficient.
              I think the consensus here is to get rid of the gas. Despite we have it from the Nordsea, but the price structure is 100% dependent on the situation in Europe as a whole.
              And Russia has fucked that up. So I don’t think anybody here is recommending gas for that reason. Although gas has already returned to be the cheapest option even here AFAIK, and prices have stabilized in part due to LNG from USA.

    • @[email protected]
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      181 year ago

      The heat pump I just had installed in SW Ontario hands over heating duty at -10C to the gas furnace

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          $12K for the heat pump and furnace. We’re expecting a $7K rebate (did the replacement before the audit because the old furnace died)

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Damn that ain’t cheap. What’s the expected savings per year in reduced gas/hydro?

            Edit - how quick is it expected to pay itself off

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              I’m not sure, likely somewhere between 5-7 years.

              We wouldn’t have done it if our furnace wasn’t shot. As a plus our A/C leaked it’s freon in the winter, so replacing it was an improvement as well.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            You could have gotten a whole home mini split from senville for less and it works down to -30. My heatpump from 15 years ago only did down to -10.

            I found all the HVAC guys in my area were still really pushing the heatpump and furnace combo because that’s what they knew and not what was best, cheapest or most efficient.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              How does a mini split system work? Does it plumb into traditional ducting?

              Edit: just looked them up. Also found out that a friend out East with an older, oil heater house (no central ducting) was quoted a mini split for their place at over $20K

              Our place is a four bedroom, two storey with a basement. I wonder if a mini split with the requisite air handlers would be cheaper

              On a side note, we have a West facing room with large windows that I have to run a portable AC and space heater in as it’s temp is always extreme vs the rest of the house. A mini split just for that room would be great

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                They are honestly pretty easy to install if you are at all handy. The smaller ones (like for a room) have minimal electrical needs and are something you could get an electrician buddy to do for a case of beer if you buy the parts off amazon. Depending on the brand they are varying levels of DIY but nothing a 5 min youtube video can’t teach you. All in for my house it was 6k and a saturday afternoon to get it done.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  How many mini split heat pumps and air exchangers did you put into your place

                  Overall, we should be net $5K with an installer because of rebates, but it’s good to know cheaper alternatives are available

    • @Iamdanno
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      81 year ago

      It’s not that people think they don’t work in the cold, it’s that they are less suited for the areas or days of extreme cold.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Which is why you have a backup system. I have a net zero house in Saskatchewan, Canada. My Carrier heat pump will operate to -15C, and switches to electric heating coils in the air handler if it’s colder outside. It’s a rather extreme climate here, but in most other places, you’d be fine with some baseboard heaters as backup.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      It really depends on the type of heat pump. Air-sourced heat pumps generally don’t produce heat below -30C and below -10C they generally lose enough efficiency that you’re better off using electric baseboard heating.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        My air sourced heat pump keeps my house warm just fine in the Finnish winter where temperatures of -30C aren’t unheard of. I’m not exactly sure how it works, but I assume there’s coils that’ll produce the heat by electricity if nececcary, making it at worst as efficient as direct electric heating, which is what I’d use otherwise. Here like every other house has a heatpump like that and I don’t remember hearing anyone ever complaining that they’re not working.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          The argument is bullshit in totality. But… When the supplemental electric heating coils come on, it is less efficient ON THAT DAY, than the alternative electric options. But, like I said, in totality, it’s more effective over a month, and certainly better over the course of a year. It’s a matter of people with an agenda cherry picking the 9 days a year in which it is less efficient and pretending that the other 354 days don’t count.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            When the supplemental electric heating coils come on, it is less efficient ON THAT DAY, than the alternative electric options.

            It depends what you mean by the alternative electric options. Electric resistance heating is 100% efficient and that’s what my heatpump effectively is when it gets cold enough. It’s not less efficient than wall mounted electric radiators even when it drops to -30C. You just lose the efficiency of a heatpump for that time.

            • @[email protected]
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              31 year ago

              Exactly - people somehow fail to understand that Heat Pumps, by necessity, are always more efficient than 100% of an equivalent electric solution.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            I suppose if electric heat is the primary option then sure. Around here though natural gas is pretty much ubiquitous and the cost per joule is a heck of a lot lower than electricity. About $6/GJ for natural gas, compared to about $42/GJ for electricity. Would need a pretty efficient heat pump to see the cost savings in my area.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              There are heat pumps now that use gas to do the supplemental heat. Those are the best possible option. They are equally efficient to a gas furnace when supplementing, and even cheaper when not.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I’m sure there’s applications where that’s true, but then you’re essentially talking about having a gas furnace plus a heat pump, so you’re installation cost is close to the sum of both systems. Energy rates vary by region, but around here electricity is about 7 times the cost of gas, so a heat pump running at a coefficient of performance around 3 would still cost twice as much to run as a natural gas furnace, it would be cheaper to just turn off the heat pump altogether and only use that “supplementary” heat.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  When I was looking at new heat pumps the hybrid ones were between 500 & 1000 more than the equivalent electric ones.

                  It’s not a sperate unit, it just has a gas heater in place of the electric supplemental coils.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Except that electric heating is always 100% efficient, and that’s what a heat pump falls back to. If anything it will still be more efficient than baseboard heating simply due to it having a fan to better distribute the heat (equivalent to an electric furnace with ducting). The only argument that makes sense is when comparing costs with other heat sources like natural gas, which is a whole other topic.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Interesting. A close friend is an engineer who designs HVAC systems (industrial but regardless knowledgeable).

              He’s told me that the heat pump would pull more power on those days than an equivalent electric only system.

              My heat pump definitely uses a lot of power when it’s cold.

              I wish I had access to the gas based supplemental heating for it. Economically that seems like the best option.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I think mine is undersized and close to 20 years old now. Reading your response is yet another reason I have to go through with upgrading everything.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Generally you’d have a backup heat source with an air-to-air heat pump for those really cold days like -15C and colder, like a gas furnace or a heating element unit inside (like with electrical coils). Air-to-air heat pumps are more efficient on warmer days, on colder days they would be less efficient but you’d still have a backup heat source so it would still “work”, so the article is still somewhat correct in that sense.

        Also, electric baseboard heaters can be quite a bit louder than forced-air systems with a heat pump, so you’d still be better off with a heat pump in those cases.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 year ago

      EVs work fine in cold weather. I live in Minnesota and drive an EV. It loses about 10-20% of the total range in the winter, but most of that appears to be from generating heat for the passengers.

    • Dojan
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      1 year ago

      The problem isn’t that EVs don’t work in the winter, it’s that their range gets significantly reduced. We had issues with people literally up and abandoning their vehicles because their batteries ran flat.

      In these cases the issue is less that the range is lost, and more that with snowy and cold weather traffic gets unpredictable. You can end up in long queues and that’s where the issues start.

      When I went on a work trip up in the far north I never saw a single EV. Asked my colleagues about it and none of them thought EVs particularly feasible as a primary vehicle.

      All that said, EVs work great for most people most of the time.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        We had issues with people literally up and abandoning their vehicles because their batteries ran flat.

        Do gas cars have infinite fuel tanks in your area?

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Based on context, I’d assume that the loss of efficiency of the batteries in the cold led the vehicle to over-estimate the range of the vehicle. If the car says it has 50 miles of range and the next DC charger is 40 miles away, I could imagine a situation where I’d get 30 miles down the road before the range estimate shows that there’s actually only 35 miles of range because you wanted cabin heat.

          EVs are weird in lots of ways when compared to ICE, and we’re still figuring out lots of the problems that need solving.

          • @[email protected]
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            -11 year ago

            And the people driving them are still learning the quirks for specific circumstances. Many drivers know you need to let a fuel car warm up more or to give it extra gas in XYZ scenario, but those same people won’t always know what to do when switching to electric. Or they might instead do something that helped on a fuel vehicle, but actively harms on an electric, especially with the many manufacturer specific options that have no consistent naming. Hopefully we get some naming consistency soon, if for nothing else than ease of use.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Again, are you under the impression that gas cars don’t have the same problem?

            And go ahead and ask yourself this again before submitting your next reply.

            Most EVs will factor temperature and climate use in their range predictions.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              If you are in a traffic jam, you lose range because of the heating. For gas cars, that doesn’t matter at all.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                A 1kw heater (less, given they’re all heat pumps these days) isn’t doing squat to the range compared to an 80kw motor.

                A gas car has to idle its engine to get heat. It’s burning fuel constantly… that’s why you frequently see broken down gas cars in heavy traffic.

              • @[email protected]
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                -11 year ago

                For gas cars, that doesn’t matter at all.

                …where do you think the heat comes from in gas cars?

                Electric heat doesn’t use that much energy. You can be parked for several days with the heat on in freezing weather and be fine.

                • @[email protected]
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                  41 year ago

                  From cooling the engine. When you are standing still and the engine is running it consumes about 1l/h. I just looked up some numbers for EVs: 100kWh battery, heating takes 1kW for every 10K temperature difference, so 3kWh in -10°C. Its higher if you use additional stuff like the heating for the seats. With 150kWh/100km consumption you lose 20km every hour you are in the heated car. I would say that’s a noticeable difference compared to no heating. I also checked how much an AC takes in summer and its about 1 to 2kW for 30°C.

        • Dojan
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          11 year ago

          No, I believe it’s the heating that does it. In petrol cars the heating is a side effect of the engine running. Using it to heat the car in a way improves the fuel efficiency. In an EV the heat doesn’t come from the engine, so the battery needs to feed both the engine and the heater.

          You can have the engine on and not driving and your petrol will last quite long, not so much with an EV, unfortunately.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Using it to heat the car in a way improves the fuel efficiency

            Normally, yes, but in this case it’s being used purely for heat, with probably 10% efficiency, where the EV is operating at 300% efficiency so no, definitely not.

            You can have the engine on and not driving and your petrol will last quite long, not so much with an EV, unfortunately.

            As I mentioned elsewhere, it will last several days.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    It’s not so much a myth as it is old information that is no longer accurate

    The heat pumps that were available 20-30 years ago weren’t effective/efficienct enough at low outdoor temperatures to be practical.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Not sure I would call this a “myth”. It’s just that technology has progressed to the point that it’s less of an issue.

    Mine stopped working at 100% when it got <20*F and turned into a giant popsicle.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I mean, it’s not about them not working, it’s the efficiency. Most models will switch to a normal electric heater, if they can’t extract anymore heat from the surroundings. At which temperature that happens, depends on your type of heat pump.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      Not correct for modern heat pumps. They work down to at least -40F without switching to creating heat.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        That’s why I said it depends on the type of the heat pump. Some can go really low, the cheaper ones not. At some point (the latest at -273.15C :D) they need to switch.

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    I want to understand what happens when it’s too cold out. And just running in pure air sourced HP mode, without supplemental heat.

    Does it keep running at 100% but produces no heat? Limited heat? Does the house get colder and colder until everyone turns into a popsicle?

    Or does it only heat the house to 18c instead of 20c?

    In a climate where the low is -10c, how well does it work?

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      It gets less effective, down to running at 100% and not moving heat. Heat pumps work by expanding a gas, which cools it. Since it’s cold, the “heat” outside was the gas. Then the gas is taken inside and compressed, the gas heats up from the compression (since all the energy is squeezed into a smaller space, effectively speaking). Now that heat can be transferred to the colder air inside. So long as the expanded gas turns colder than the outside, it can absorb heat.

      From a Google, common ones can go as low as - 25C, which means they are able to cool a gas to lower temps than that when expanded. There is still heat to get, even in -25C.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      A heat pump will always generate a small amount of heat just from the compressor running, but most of the time that’s a lot less energy than is being moved. As the outdoor temperature drops the delta between input and output air temp will decrease until the difference is entirely from generated heat in the compressor. Most designs would turn on extra resistive heating once the output temperature drops below your set target though. Modern designs are capable of moving a reasonable amount of heat even down to at least -25°C / -13°F now though.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I have an air sourced heat pump and it gets to -35C for a few weeks at time here. When it’s that cold it does produce heat but your breath is hotter. There’s no point in running it as it just doesn’t make any kind of useful heat. Below -10C the amount of heat it produces noticeably tapers off.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      One thing that happens is that the defrost cycle takes a longer time, so it spends less time heating the building

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I can only talk for myself but I have a Nibe pump here in Sweden with air source outside pump and water heating system to radiators on the inside. Even down to -30° with really shitty windows it was enough heat for me to be comfortable. Though it did indeed use the supplementary resistive heating a bit it was still able to give me about a 200% efficiency during that period. Give a typical winter (usually around -5-10C but, as said can go down to -20C or -30C for a week or so) it still runs an average of about 300-400% efficiency.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      You either buy some portable electric heaters for those 2-3 weeks when it’s necessary, or you get a heat pump that has resistive heating as a backup.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    So my question with heat pumps is more how much does humidity effect the efficiency? Where I live is high elevation, has cold winters, but the air is dry as fuck. Single digit humidity for a month wouldn’t be unusual.

    My understanding is that heat pumps work best with humidity since moving moisture is part of how the heat is produced. When does a reasonably priced heat pump start falling off in efficiency?

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      They are just AC units in reverse. The biggest effect humidity is going to have is on how much condensation is going to form on the exterior radiator. That’ll form frost that’ll have to be melted in a defrosting cycle. That’ll decrease performance and efficacy. Low humidity should keep that to a minimum.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    There is a really, really big caveat here.

    While all of this is true, and while heat pumps are definitely more efficient than gas/oil/electric heat, you MUST have a well-insulated home without drafts. If your home is not well insulated, or is drafty, then heat pumps likely will not keep your home at a comfortable temperature.

    A standard furnace works by kicking on when heat drops below the set point of your thermostat, and then it blasts heated air until the whole space is a certain temperature above the set point on your thermostat, and then shuts off. The most efficient heat pumps are constantly trickling a little heat at a time, rather than cycling on and off. If your home is poorly insulated or drafty, then you can end up losing heat faster than the heat pump can bring it in. The better your insulation and the better sealed your home is, the better your results with a heat pump will be.

    Unfortunately, my home is largely uninsulated and pretty drafty; without doing a pretty significant amount of work, at a fairly steep cost, I can’t retrofit to a heat pump.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      This is my first comment, but since it’s my job might as well:

      The fact that you need a well insulated house for a heat pump is absolutely not true. What you need is a house where the expected heat loss at the design temperature can be added to the house using low temperature heating such as in floor heating. You can live in a cardboard box for all intends and purposes, if you can keep your house warm with (loads of) 35-40C water you are fine. And you would be amazed how much heat in floor heating can provide when having tubes at 10cm heart to heart distance from each other. Your energy bill will be enormous, but it would be as well if you would burn gas in a stove.

      Does insulation help? Obviously. The most energy efficient, sustainable and comfortable kWh of heat is the one you don’t need. Is it a requirement? Absolutely not.

      Source, ex aerospace engineer that advices and installs heat pumps for residential buildings

      Edit: This might differ across the pond but in the Netherlands in floor heating is super common. In America I believe this is not so much the case? Not sure.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      A standard furnace works by kicking on when heat drops below the set point

      So does a heat pump, and you can get Air to Water heat pumps that work almost exactly as a furnace.

      The most efficient heat pumps are constantly trickling a little heat at a time, rather than cycling on and off.

      Our stoker wood pellet furnace does the same if possible, it can’t go below 25% capacity, because it doesn’t burn right at lower capacities. So at certain temperatures, it maintains a steady state, but at others it has to turn on and off. A heat pump can easily do whatever is more efficient.

      PS:

      Heat pumps are similar technology to fridges, which also turn on and off depending on needs.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      what does insulation have to do with heat pumps?

      heat energy is heat energy, where you get it from doesn’t matter, if your house isn’t well insulated the heat loss will be the same regardless what pumps in the heat.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        The home is a container for heat. If it is a poorly insulated container the heat pump does not put out enough BTUs to keep the house warm because the heat is escaping faster than it can be generated.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          If that’s the case, you simply installed a heat pump with too little capacity…

          Heatpumps come in all sizes… I just looked up one that outputs 50 kW worth of heat, and if that isn’t enough you can integrate up to 16 of them to output a total of 800 kW of heat.

          That being said, if your house is badly insulated and drafty, you should fix that first, it will immediately cut your heating bill, no matter which heat source you use.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      It seems to me like you’re describing the genetic problem of having an undersized heating system, not anything specific to heat pumps. I’m positive heat pumps exist that are equal in capacity to whatever furnace you have.

      It does sound like in your case improving your house’s insulation would be a better investment than installing a new heating system though.