grsthegreat
Super Star Member
A heat pump is 3x as efficient as electric resistive heating. Try a clamp meter on your heat pump sometime. After the starting surge, mine draws about 9 amps to heat my entire house, and the system was sized before I upgraded all the doors and windows and insulation. It's 17 years old, and I'm sure I can downsize when I replace it.
The air handler has two 60 amp circuits for the heating strips, but since they don't come on I have never measured the draw. Assuming the code 80% load, that means the system goes from 2160 watts on the pump to 25,000 watts on the heat strips. It doesn't take much of that to ruin any savings that come from having a heat pump.
I have a 4.5 ton heat pump thats about 3 years old. Not counting starting surge, it runs at aprox 32 amps to heat my 4200 SF house. Since 2 cadet wall heaters will heat 2 rooms and use 20 amps , the heat pump is WAY better. It is a different kind of heat than wall heaters or gas..thats for sure. It feels slightly cool at the registers. But it will heat my house to whatever i set it at.
I have a Honeywell pro 8000 (had some letters before it....cant remember them though). You can set the set points when 2nd stage (back up emergency heat) will occur. Even if my house is at 62F, and the tstat adjusts to 68 by timer, the gas heater DOES NOT fire off. The thermostat has a learning mode that allows it to know when it needs to turn on to allow the house to be 68 at the set time.
Smarter than i am thats for sure.