truckdiagnostics
Platinum Member
i believe we are on the same page. The point i am trying to make is today, you do not necessarily want a ductless system, as you want to exchange the inside air with the outside air. You can do it with a HRV, then you are looking at ducts and you might as well have used a simple air handler with ducts. Commercial buildings are going to demand so many air exchanges an hour. i would think you would want something similar in a new home. In the future slapping a mini split on the wall and not exchanging the air isn't going to get it. For a single server room or simple one room addition as a band aid, yes. So, yes a residential house with a geo unit heat and chilling water would get it. I do believe a vrf would get it too. I am not that familiar. Then you fish pex water line through. Use horizonal chilled case coils and basically you have one unit and some pumps. I believe you can get the VRF to the same thing, but it is more complicated.To ensure we're on the same page, what are you proposing for residential use for home heating and cooling, not commercial use?
To some extent, why Geothermal is one of the best sources for HVAC for residential use, but also more expensive than forced air.
When the outlaw's come for thanksgiving and one of them has the flu I don't want them giving it to everybody.
You brought up office building. Those same unit that they are using as ground source heat pumps they are using to take the heat out of the air before it leaves the building(air source). Converting it to hot water, then using it to heat the air going into a particular room. This way they can move the heating and cooling around. Say every one in the office just moved into the conference room. Well you wouldn't need to heat the air going in there anymore. That zone would shut off and you would divert the hot water to the office area.
So, how much more is geo(ground source) really than forced air gas heat once you throw in AC? Basically it is the cost of the ground source loop. If you include that it can heat your potable hot water?