Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default Heat Pumps?

Friend lives in Phoenix AZ. Starting to research Heat Pumps.
Looking for reviews and info to find "best" for his area.

Experiences? Links?

TIA

LB

  #2   Report Post  
twfsa
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Maytag is great use it in Nebraska work like a champ 16 seer.

Tom

wrote in message ...
Friend lives in Phoenix AZ. Starting to research Heat Pumps.
Looking for reviews and info to find "best" for his area.

Experiences? Links?

TIA

LB



  #4   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Travis Jordan wrote:

wrote:
Friend lives in Phoenix AZ. Starting to research Heat Pumps.


http://www.google.com/search?q=%22heat+pump%22+phoenix

You're welcome.


Yea I usually do that first but was hoping to hear from folks in AZ with
real experiences:-))

LB



  #6   Report Post  
SQLit
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote in message ...
Friend lives in Phoenix AZ. Starting to research Heat Pumps.
Looking for reviews and info to find "best" for his area.

Experiences? Links?

TIA

LB


Heat pumps are used through out the Valley of the Sun. They work well for
cooling. Heating function is fine as long as the temps do not go below 40 F.
They do start diminishing on the heat cycle below 45 F. Same is true of
the cooling when the temp gets above 105 F. The design temp for heat pumps
used to be 92 F. I do not know if they have raised that since I am not
working on newer equipment any more.

The most important piece of the puzzle is the installer. 10 seer is 10 seer
no matter whether you by jana-junk (Goodman) or American Standard. ( or any
other manufactures that you want to substitute )

Placement of the condenser can be an issue. I would have the condenser in
the shade or not in direct view of the sun. Every little bit helps.

Scroll compressors cost more and are quieter. If they are looking for the
long run go scroll.
http://198.147.238.24/ac_calc/default.asp

this site will let you play what if to an extent. Make sure that you use at
least 2000 cooling hours. Even if the map shows Phoenix in a area lower.
Cooling season can run from May to October.



  #7   Report Post  
Dick
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Wed, 9 Mar 2005 08:50:37 -0700, "SQLit"
wrote:


wrote in message ...
Friend lives in Phoenix AZ. Starting to research Heat Pumps.
Looking for reviews and info to find "best" for his area.

Experiences? Links?

TIA

LB


Heat pumps are used through out the Valley of the Sun. They work well for
cooling. Heating function is fine as long as the temps do not go below 40 F.
They do start diminishing on the heat cycle below 45 F. Same is true of
the cooling when the temp gets above 105 F. The design temp for heat pumps
used to be 92 F. I do not know if they have raised that since I am not
working on newer equipment any more.

The most important piece of the puzzle is the installer. 10 seer is 10 seer
no matter whether you by jana-junk (Goodman) or American Standard. ( or any
other manufactures that you want to substitute )

Placement of the condenser can be an issue. I would have the condenser in
the shade or not in direct view of the sun. Every little bit helps.

Scroll compressors cost more and are quieter. If they are looking for the
long run go scroll.
http://198.147.238.24/ac_calc/default.asp

this site will let you play what if to an extent. Make sure that you use at
least 2000 cooling hours. Even if the map shows Phoenix in a area lower.
Cooling season can run from May to October.



We just put in a Trane dual-fuel heat pump in the Prescott area.
These use a natural gas furnace for backup rather than the
conventional heat strips. This gives you the best of both worlds.
The heat pump operates down to about 38F, then the natural gas takes
over. Gas heat is also used for the startup in the morning. In fact,
any time there is more than 1-1/2 degrees differential between the
thermostat setting and actual inside temperature. We have had it only
a week now (replaced a Day-Night gaspack), but so far we really like
it. My wife loves the more gentle heat of the heat pump for normal
heating. Will have to wait a while to test out the cooling. Should
be an improvement over the old 8-SEER gaspack.


  #9   Report Post  
Goedjn
 
Posts: n/a
Default


It's supposedly cheaper to heat a home here with a heatpump than a gas
heater because the climate is so mild. Rheem/Ruud, Trane/American



If only you could drive the heatpump with an NG engine, you could
do both at once! (Oh, wait... you can.)
  #10   Report Post  
Dick
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 10 Mar 2005 10:50:44 -0500, Goedjn wrote:


It's supposedly cheaper to heat a home here with a heatpump than a gas
heater because the climate is so mild. Rheem/Ruud, Trane/American



If only you could drive the heatpump with an NG engine, you could
do both at once! (Oh, wait... you can.)


We just installed a Trane XL1200 dual-fuel heat pump. It uses natural
gas for 2nd stage heat instead of heat strips. Here in Arizona we can
opt for the timed electrical service (those on APS) which gives us
electricity at 4-cents per KH from 9:00 at night to 9:00 in the
morning weekdays, and all day on the weekends. Prime time power is
close to 12-cents per KH. We are also paying about $1 per therm for
natural gas. That means we can heat at night and weekends for the low
4-cents per KH using the heat pump instead of the expensive NG (and
going up all the time.) The natural gas is still there for warming up
in the morning, and taking over when the outside temp gets down to
around 38-degrees F. We have only had it for a week, but I will be
watching the operating cost very closely as compared to our old
gaspack which used NG exclusively for heating. Our NG bills in the
winter approached $200. We have a 2,200 sq. ft. house with excellent
insulation. Home built in 1991.


  #11   Report Post  
stretch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Watch out for the 500 sq ft per ton rule. That is a national installed
average, but does not substitute for a real load calculation. I have a
2000 sq ft house in hot, humid South Carolina with just a 2-ton unit.
I did a load calculation before installing. Size depends on how much
glass & insulation you have, not sq ft of house.

stretch

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Experiences with ground source heat pumps? Mike Deblis UK diy 52 September 29th 04 08:53 PM
CH+HW upgrade, unvented or thermal store cylinder? Ian Calderbank UK diy 14 August 15th 04 11:42 PM
Followup: York heat pump replacement - quote sounds high, thoughts? Peter Drier Home Repair 5 June 26th 04 07:31 AM
Calculating window heat loss Duane Morin Home Repair 9 February 21st 04 03:42 PM
Untimely airconditioning thread Grunff UK diy 133 December 14th 03 12:29 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:56 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"