View Single Post
  #113   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,uk.d-i-y
Commander Kinsey Commander Kinsey is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,540
Default Heat pump SEER rating

On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 02:22:06 +0100, micky wrote:

In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 22 Oct 2019 01:00:55 +0100, "Commander
Kinsey" wrote:

On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 00:51:47 +0100, micky wrote:

In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 22 Oct 2019 10:47:45 +1100, "Rod Speed"
wrote:



"micky" wrote in message
...
In alt.home.repair, on Mon, 21 Oct 2019 21:59:03 +0100, Robert
wrote:

On 21/10/2019 20:54, Rod Speed wrote:
Commander Kinsey wrote
Why can't I find a heat pump with a good SEER rating? The USA has a
law stating 13 minimum. Yet here in the UK, I looked at Panasonic and
they're all 7 to 11!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Season...ficiency_ratio
Which suggests that the seasonal weighting parameters used in the US ,
Europe and possibly UK are all different which will give very different
figures.

So if he compared the EERs, he'd get a fair comparison between those
sold in the US and UK?


This is the more important question, and you are the OP, but you ignored
it.


What am I supposed to do with the question? I don't know how SEER and EER are calculated for different countries, whether the country they're measured in is specified etc.

This is the more important question.

Does the US have a regulation on minimum EER?

Presumably you mean the UK. No they don't.

No, I meant the US. He says there's a minimum SEER, but I'm curious if
there's a minimum EER.


One is proportional to the other. SEER assumes a set temperature.



BTW, a good chance you can't find the exact same model number in the US
vs. UK, even if they were the very same, but since the cps is different,
they're probably not the very same.


What is cps?