Thanks for that chart, techman. Looks like my savings would be like this:
Heat Pump $.10 $16.25
Geothermal $.10 $8.39
Hmmmm, looks pretty good to me, as long as I stay comfortable winter/summer, for me because of fibromyalgia pain, that means about 74° winter, 73° summer. And, maintenance is cheaper than my current heat pump (I just figured out that when y'all boys use "HP", ye mean heat pump, not Hewitt Packard!).
Fordmantpw, the 7 series by water furnace is the Mac Daddy of Furnaces.
Adding to the loop was smart and I believe the co-op guy was right. When the unit gets to max. It can actually freeze or cool the ground around it such that it can not get as mush heat out of it. Therefore having to work harder. That is the advantage of using water from well. Issue there the discharge, and if you have a place for the discharge that is the way to go. back to your loop.... when they figure the loop size they figure the unit will shut off, therefore giving the ground time to warm back up so to speak. I will have issues with the unit in the shop, some springs when the frost pushes deep or I run it really hard for extended periods. So, whoever sized your loop new what they where doing! And having the loop size checked and the installation making sure it is actually at the depth they said it is going to be is a big deal. Go out there with a tape measure and check it. They use a sub contract to dig and back fill the whole.Yeah, I really like the 7 series. It's the only way we could get separate zones for my office and our sun room, each about 170 square feet. I work from home, so I want to keep that room at a constant temp. Our sun room has 10 3'x5' windows, so I felt we needed something there to make it a four seasons room.
The unit is a 5 ton unit, but we had 6 ton worth of loops put in. That is the only way the co-op would give us the rebate. He wasn't comfortable with the sun room, and felt we would come back on him for too high of an electric bill. The HVAC company was 100% comfortable with the 5 ton, so I didn't really care what the co-op guy thought. We spent the extra few hundred bucks to keep him happy and avoid issues, but I think that was the right thing to do anyway. Nobody ever says you have too much capacity!![]()
Adding to the loop was smart and I believe the co-op guy was right. When the unit gets to max. It can actually freeze or cool the ground around it such that it can not get as mush heat out of it. Therefore having to work harder. That is the advantage of using water from well. Issue there the discharge, and if you have a place for the discharge that is the way to go. back to your loop.... when they figure the loop size they figure the unit will shut off, therefore giving the ground time to warm back up so to speak. I will have issues with the unit in the shop, some springs when the frost pushes deep or I run it really hard for extended periods. So, whoever sized your loop new what they where doing! And having the loop size checked and the installation making sure it is actually at the depth they said it is going to be is a big deal. Go out there with a tape measure and check it. They use a sub contract to dig and back fill the whole.
Nobody ever says you have too much capacity!![]()
fordmantpw, I have horizontal loop hence the 8 instead of 6. More cost effective and if you have the space. I just paid the farmer to come out for the day with his excavator. The big reason for the 6 instead of the 8 is we would have had to bank it, for safety in the trench. Up until say winter before last has not been issue. I have also heard bad things about the slinkies. We laid out our own loop and make up own manifolds. Also, based on my understanding on how the 7 series it is a nice unit..... Both our units do not have staged compressor, not available back then. Also believe the 7 is a whole bunch quieter. The unit in the house is under the bed room and when it is running has a nasty hum. Putting it there not one of my smarter ideas. I have heard other complaints on the noise/hum. So consider that when locating.
A word of caution. We had geo installed and actually did have problems with too much capacity. Basically due to how tight the house is along with spray foam insulation our run times were averaging anywhere from 8-15 minutes even when the temp was in the teens. Multiple zones also compounded the problem. This led to inefficient run times in the winter and high humidity in the summer due to short cycling.
Jeremy
Find somebody doing directional drilling. The guy who installed ours geo had directional drilling machine. They could install loops from one relatively small hole. I can't recall the brand of the machine. It used a pipe made of mild steel that was passed through several pulleys to bend is in such arc that it would emerge from ground in certain distance. On the front of the pipe was hydraulic motor driving the drilling head. The motor was powered by a drilling polymer that lubricated the bore and provided a thermal contact when the loop pipe was pulled in the bore by retracting drill. They could install loops under the buildings or trees.