Interesting thoughts, thanks Kimi.
Can you either post or send me via Trust the name of your company?
Can you either post or send me via Trust the name of your company?
We use an air to air heat pump to heat our front room. We have no gas only night storage heaters, after turning the night storage heaters on for the first time leading up to winter I very quickly made my mind up that I needed a better solution. After reading up about various solutions for a while I decided to try a split air con unit and do not regret it one bit.I dont know of anyone who has applied the air con unit heating for a reference or opinion. In terms of the time spent heating, this would appear to have the benefit that we heat on demand, a cold room could/should be heated quite quickly, with the benefit of cooling in summer. Under floor heating seems more the norm, and if we were using the house 24/7 its what I would go for. Given the progressive heating style needed, I am worried we will waste energy heating spaces that wont be used often, and the system will be slow to respond when we need a boost. The hot water supplied by the same ASHP would be a bonus though.
Any thoughts or recommendations welcome. Kiwi, would be grateful for your input here! Thanks!
Yes you set your target temperature on the machine using a remote control and then the unit will power up until that target is met, once up to temp it will switch off again and keep repeating the process.Thanks for that Doobedoo. Given our (relatively infrequent) use of the building, it seems air to air would be better suited to our needs, heating on demand, than air to water underfloor heating where we might be heating spaces unnecessarily and then slow to react if we needed warmth. Air to air cooling in summer would be nice too.
In practice, once a room is at temperature, does the unit then turn off and then come back on if required? I presume if well insulated, this shouldnt happen that often?
How does it work?
It's actually quite simple. Air conditioners work in much the same way as your refrigerator except there are two separate, but integral, parts to the system. There is an outside unit housing the compressor that is similar to the exterior back of your fridge. It draws warmth from the outside air in even the coldest of weather. That warmth is then transferred inside the home using a refrigerant process through a piping system powered by an indoor fan unit that is typically mounted to the wall. This is why the system is also often referred to as a heat pump rather then air conditioning. Both are in fact the same. Similarly, in summer, the reverse happens. Warm air is drawn from the interior room and expelled by the outside unit.
Heat Pumps are capable of transferring up to 4kW of heat into a space while only consuming 1kW of electrical energy. The energy efficiency of a heat pump will decreases as the temperature difference between inside and outside becomes greater, even at low temperatures a heat pump can provide 3 times as much heat as a normal electric space heater would provide with the same amount of electricity input. This makes Heat pumps extremely energy efficient.
"Not all Heat Pumps are designed to continue working where temperatures fall below freezing point"
The principle of air conditioning always comes down to the same: absorb energy in one place and release it in another place
The process requires an indoor unit, an outdoor unit and copper piping to connect both. Through the piping the refrigerant flows from one unit to another. It is the refrigerant that absorbs the energy in one unit and releases it in the other.
Cooling mode (Heating mode is the same but in reverse)
1 Indoor unit
A fan blows the hot indoor air over a heat exchanging coil through which cold refrigerant flows. The cold refrigerant absorbs the heat from the air and cooled air is blown into the room.
2 Copper piping
The refrigerant circulates through the units and the piping and takes the heat from the indoor unit to the outdoor unit.
3 Outdoor unit
Through compression, the refrigerant gas is heated and its boiling point increases. In the outdoor unit the obtained heat throught compression is released to the outdoor air by means of a fan which blows the outdoor air over a heat exchanging coil.
4 Refrigerant
The liquid refrigerant flows back to the indoor unit.
5 Indoor unit
Back in the indoor unit, the refrigerant is decompressed and thus enabled to extract heat form the indoor air.
Inverter Technology:
Here's some info about inverters, the same applies across all manufacturers however efficiency levels are different but the operation side of things is the same. There is an article at the bottom from Mitsubishi Electric where they have done a comparison test for a fan heater and heat pump. This is not unique to Mitsubishi Electric, similar costs will be seen across all heat pumps... its a very efficient technology. Different manufacturers will have different efficiencies. The best manufacturers are Mitsubishi Electric, Daikin, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Fujitsu, Sanyo, LG, any other manufactures are entry level and will not offer as good quality systems or efficiencies.
Inverter systems save energy by using a variable controlled Compressor. The output is controlled to only provide the energy required to keep the room to the set temperature. By reducing the output required less power is used and this substantially reduces power consumption. Inverter control not only saves you money but also keeps you more comfortable.
We’re on economy 7 which means we have a cheap night time rate but to be honest we don’t really use a lot of hot water. We shower using an electric shower and wash up using a dishwasher.Thanks. May I ask how you heat your hot water? I’m guessing by solar when you are able and immersion when you are not?
For air con units I take it?And in a complete u-turn Ive been quoted £85 + vat (x3 units) for annual maintenance. £300 a year is multiples of what I expect to pay on electricity to run the property each year!
Thanks Kimi.
How much maintenance to the outdoor condenser units need? I am wondering if the maintenance on the condenser and the indoor inverter units is something I can do myself?
Ever heard of legionnaires disease ?
from what i understand and ive only ever helped fit one system, the heating system needs to be new with 22mm pipework throughout the house and turning down to 15mm for 3 rads and so on, all the radiators need to be massively over sized..
The cylinder gets heated to a certain temp which ive forgot and to top the heat up comes from an immersion heater to kill off the disease at 60c minimum, the solution which i have also forgot off the top of my head is like an anti freeze and works at lower temps.. I was just there a few years ago helping the guy out on the plumbing side.