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need to buy heat pump or furnace. Would like to know which is prefered.

2007-09-11 04:42:43 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

8 answers

Heat pumps work off the principle of heat of compression. To accomplish this, they have a reversing valve which changes the flow of freon in the system. It effectively switches the condenser (which is normally the outside portion of the A/C) with the evaporator (normally the inside portion of the A/C). This arrangement typically works fairly efficiently down to an outside temperature of around 32 deg F.
If you are in a fairly warm climate, with moderate winters then a heat pump would work fine. If you live in an area with cold winters, I would definately go with the furnace, preferrably a high efficiency gas furnace.

2007-09-11 07:53:36 · answer #1 · answered by Jeffrey S 6 · 0 0

while you're speaking approximately an air to air warmth pump (the form with a container exterior that appears like a huge air conditioner), it won't replace your oil furnace, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that it is going to supplement it. The AC will artwork besides as, or extra suitable than, a classic air conditioner, so which you will no longer choose supplementary air con, yet you will choose supplementary heating. Air to air warmth exchangers pull warmth from the exterior air to assist warmth the residing house. regardless of if this is purely too chilly exterior, they do no longer artwork properly. it may warmth your residing house in cool climate, yet no longer chilly climate, and the low value expenses could probable pay for the cost of the unit over some years. the form of ductwork does not make an substantial distinction. I surely have a floor source warmth pump. It pulls the warmth from underground coils. because of the fact the temperature of the floor below the frost line in no way drops too far, it works all 365 days. I stay in substantial Ontario, Canada. The coldest I surely have seen considering the fact that I moved right here replaced into ten days the place the temperature in no way rose above minus 40. the warmth pump saved the residing house heat, and the supplementary heating in no way kicked in. the themes with this sort of heating are the preliminary value, and the choose for outsized or extra duct artwork. the warmth pump does not warmth the air as much as an oil or gasoline flame, so which you ought to flow extra air. This works properly, because of the fact there are not any chilly spots interior the residing house.

2016-12-16 17:16:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Get a gas forced heat furnace. It gives out better heat. You'll notice that the air coming out of the vents is warm.

With a heat pump, the air coming out is coolish. You have to keep your house at a constant temperature because it warms up slowly, and it takes an immense amount of energy to go from cold to warm.

And, if you live in a cold area, a heat pump isn't going to do it.

2007-09-11 04:57:44 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would definitely go with a furnace and gas preferred. We had a heat pump in a townhome in North Carolina years ago and it couldn't handle the mild winter there. The house was always cold and the bills were incredibly high. It was also prone to freezing up. Gas is so efficient and cost effective.

2007-09-11 07:36:13 · answer #4 · answered by dawnb 7 · 0 0

If you live in Miami, Florida or somewhere with a climate like that, a heat pump is just fine. However, if your winters are very cold at all, I would not recommend a heat pump, I would go with a gas furnace.

2007-09-11 06:34:47 · answer #5 · answered by TB28 2 · 0 0

A heat pump works like a normal air conditioner except to provide heat the refrigerant flow is reversed. Which is better depends on your situation and the cost depends on the size as well as the model you buy. For a complete guide check out my source. Do this before you buy because there is a lot of information there.

2007-09-11 05:50:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a heat pump works off warm air in out side air, down to 0 deg, if it gets colder where you are at, then i would go with a furnace,
a furnace will give you better heat any way,

2007-09-11 04:49:34 · answer #7 · answered by William B 7 · 0 0

you can get a fossil fuel kit for a heat pump and set it for a certain temp for those colder days and nights. instead of an air handler, you can get a gas furnace along w/ an outside heat pump so you have the best of both worlds.

2007-09-11 10:53:24 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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