heehaw
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2000
- Messages
- 2,076
- Location
- russellville, arkansas
- Tractor
- Kubota M4900, B7510 and RTV
Ken_CT said:Must be the new math, but if I have 300% efficiency shouldn't I be getting 3 times more energy out of the system than I put in? That's even better than perpetual motion.
Did you notify your electric utility that you installed a heat pump? I am on my second house with an air to air heat pump. We moved from a ~1600 sq ft house into a~3400 sq ft house; both had heat pumps. The first house averaged around $115 per month year round to heat and cool. The second house averages (are you ready?) $115 per month. The second house is MUCH better insulated than the first and in fact it has two heat pump furnaces. Our electric utility cuts the rate way down in the winter. I know people that have $50-$70 electric bills just for lights and our entire bill is $115.EddieWalker said:My home is a year old and I put in an electric HVAC system with a heat pump. It was supposed to be more energy efficient. Cost to heat our 1,000 sq ft home was just over $100 per month in addition to our normal non heated or airconditioned months. The price of electricity has gone up, so I'm sure it would cost more.
We had two stand alone ceramic heaters from Sams Club that I used to heat my previous place. We pluged them in and used jus them to heat our home last year and our heating bill droped $100 per month. We rarely need two of them and usualy leave one running all night while we sleep. The home is two stories and the kids bedrooms are upstairs. They are nice and warm too from that one heater running all night at the base of the stairs.
Looking back, I'm anoyed that I paid extra for a heat pump that we don't even use.
Eddie
BobRip said:... A gas furnace with heat pump gives you the option of using the heat pump above 40 degress where it is effiicient and not stressed and the gas furnace below 40. You can change this temperature depending on how the prices of these energy sources change.