Can you get a single heat pump system that does both?
We have a geothermal heat pump that we put in when we built our house. It uses water (closed loops) to exchange heat/cold instead of air. But that unit also has a desuperheater that does supplement hot water. The ideal setup is to have a non-powered water heater that is warmed by the output of the desuperheater, that feeds a powered water heater. This creates a situation where the water entering the powered water heater is already pretty warm requiring less work for it.
unfortunately, my knowledge at the time wasn’t where it is today, and our installer was also not well versed. So we just have a single water heater, but it is plumbed into the desuperheater at least. Ours just cycles water through the desuperheater into the powered tank. Probably still helps some but I suspect not as much.
admiralteal@kbin.social 11 months ago
I don't think there's much for _consumer _single heat pump systems that do both. I've seen a few, but mostly it's just a tiny heat pump built into the cap of a traditional water heater.
Worth pointing out that the nature of a heat pump is that the housewide heat pump is pumping warm air into the house to make it available for the water heater, which then pumps that warm air into the water. So it is just one big machine, fundamentally.
The criticism of the heat pump water heater: they're loud. A high frequency compressor buzz while operating. If you are switching to one, make sure it is located somewhere where the noise won't bother you. Mine is in a mechanical room in the middle of my house and it is annoying when operating -- I program it to run at night and close doors when going to bed. If I could do it over again, I'd put in in the (insulated) attic in spite of all the risks involved in that. More hot air available for it to use up there anyway.
Notsosuperfloh@discuss.tchncs.de 11 months ago
at my parents house the is a 14kw heat pump that does heating and water and it’s not an industrial heat pump. you can get them from daikin, but they need three phase ac.
ikidd@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I would call anything that needs 3-phase to be “industrial”. The number of residences with 3-phase would be in the low hundredths of a percent of homes.
Notsosuperfloh@discuss.tchncs.de 11 months ago
3-phase 230V 16A is standard here. but you can get up to 30A if the wiring allows it. I’ve never seen a house with only 1 or 2-phase.
tunetardis@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
That’s a lot of good info. Thanks!
I hadn’t considered the noise issue. I often wear noise-cancelling ear cans while I’m working. I wonder if they might help?