It might well be, this depends on what you pay for gas.

There are other advantages though, no flame means much improved safety, no need 
for a vent or flue for combustion gasses, no noxious combustible fuel on the 
premises no carbon-dioxide risk, usually less maintenance and a single heating 
and cooling unit. When it is time to replace or service your furnace might be a 
good time to consider switching over. A big enough unit will look after your 
domestic hot water as well and even heat your swimming pool if you have one and 
want to heat it.

Dale Leavens, Cochrane Ontario Canada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Skype DaleLeavens
Come and meet Aurora, Nakita and Nanook at our polar bear habitat.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: tunecollector 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, August 26, 2007 10:22 PM
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] What Do You Want Information ON?


  So is a heat pump more energy efficient than, say, a gas heater? In mild
  southern California, am I better off getting a heat pump?

  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  On Behalf Of Boyce, Ray
  Sent: Sunday, August 26, 2007 6:47 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] What Do You Want Information ON?

  Hi Jewel
  How a Heat Pump Works

  Heat pumps transfer heat from one place to another--providing both
  heating and cooling. They work on the fundamental principle that heat
  exists in air even
  at extremely low temperatures--down to -460 degrees F. In the winter, a
  heat pump extracts heat from outside air and delivers it indoors. To
  cool a house
  on hot summer days, it works in reverse, extracting heat from room air
  and pumping it outdoors. The process is a bit technical, but here's a
  brief look
  at how they work:

  Air-source heat pumps. The most common type of heat pump is an
  "air-source" system. "Split" air-source systems have an outdoor unit
  which includes a compressor,
  outdoor coil, fan and reversing valve. That unit is connected with
  refrigerant-filled tubing to an indoor component. The indoor unit
  contains a fan, indoor
  coil and a supplemental resistance heating element. "Package" systems
  combine both components in a single unit that's typically placed on the
  roof.

  Depending on whether the heat pump is in a cooling or heating mode, the
  refrigerant moving through the system makes the indoor coils either hot
  or cold.
  A blower draws room air in through a filter and pulls it across the
  indoor coil. An optional electric-resistance heating element can kick on
  when needed
  to supplement heat. As the air passes by the coils, it either gathers or
  gives off heat-- depending on whether the coils are hot or cold. Warm or
  cool
  air travels through ductwork and registers into your rooms.

  Heat pumps give off less heat at one time than a conventional gas
  furnace. This means they offer a mellower type of heat, stay on longer
  and circulate more
  air throughout the house. They're controlled by the same type of
  thermostat used for forced-air systems.

  On really cold days a heat pump must work especially hard to collect
  heat-- that's when the supplemental heater switches on to boost warmth.

  Some heat pumps can heat your water, too. The Hydrotech 2000 Heat Pump
  by Carrier is a system that utilizes the warm air that a heat pump gives
  off to help
  heat your water. Adding to its performance is a built-in microprocessor
  that varies fan speeds and output depending on need. This greatly
  improves a heat
  pump's efficiency.

  New thermal storage units even store heat and cold, collecting it during
  non-peak hours for peak-hour use. The Phoenix THP/3 stores both heat and
  cool in
  a large insulated water tank. It also supplements hot-water heat.

  Ground-source and water-source heat pumps. Not all heat pumps extract
  heat from the air. Ground-source and ground-water source heat pumps
  circulate water
  mixed with antifreeze through a system of buried tubing to gather heat
  from the earth or ground water, which is much more consistent in
  temperature than
  air. Below-ground temperatures are normally warmer than outside air in
  the winter and cooler than the air in summer.

  The ground-source system employs a closed loop of tubing that is buried
  below the frost line; the water-antifreeze mixture circulates through
  the tubing,
  gathering heat from the earth. A ground-water system typically involves
  pumping water from one well, transferring its heat to your house, then
  returning
  the water to another well.

  WaterFurnace, from WaterFurnace International can be set up either as a
  ground-source, closed system or an open-loop ground-water system. It
  uses half the
  electricity of ordinary heat pumps. Though the pump is about the same
  price as most heat pumps, the excavation and the ground loop of piping
  can be quite
  expensive-- $2000 or more.

  ________________________________

  From: [email protected] <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com>

  [mailto:[email protected]
  <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> ] On Behalf Of Jewel Blanch
  Sent: Monday, 27 August 2007 11:40
  To: [email protected] <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> 
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] What Do You Want Information ON?

  Ray! In your "How do they work?" articles, has there been one on heat
  pumps? There was a rather dubious mention of them in an article re
  electricity usage, but I do not recall one on exactly how they work!

  Jewel

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