‘You can walk around in a T-shirt’: how Norway brought heat pumps in from the cold | Device installed in two-thirds of households of country - eviltoast
  • Telorand@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    There’s also different kinds of heat pumps. The most expensive version is vertical bore, but it also does better in colder climates. The term “heat pump” is kind of confusing to the average person, because it represents several different ways/layouts to accomplish the same goal.

    Additionally, even if it can’t keep up in extreme cold weather (hypothetically), imagine if you have a system that can heat your home to 15C, and then you have supplemental heating on top of that. You’d still save money and energy over having traditional heating methods.

    • Jay@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      It’s all basically the same type of systems, it just varies as where they pull/send to. The vertical bore style is just straight down instead of loops in your backyard for the installations where there isn’t much yard to work with. It takes more specialized equipment because you’re drilling rather than just burying lines, hence most of the added costs.

      Where I live it drops into the -30 to -40c degree temps and properly installed geothermal systems have no problems with it.

    • gramie@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      We have a heat pump, and it seems to work just fine down to about -25°C, even though we do not have an inground circuit, just a device that looks like an air conditioning heat exchanger (i.e. a cube sitting beside the house).