25 States Agree To Quadruple Number Of Heat Pumps In America::The US Climate Alliance met in New York City this week to explain the benefits of heat pumps, including better health for American families.

  • jasondj@ttrpg.network
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    1 year ago

    Sweet. I have oil-fired hydronic baseboard heat and indirect DHW. Live in Massachusetts. Does that mean they’ll be some good deals on moving to air-to-water heat pumps?

    And what about the 1-3 days a year when ambient is outside of operating range? Bundle up in front of resistive space heaters?

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I’m from North Carolina, heat pumps are pretty common here, I grew up in a heat pump only house.

      The system has resistive strips, sometimes labelled “emergency heat” on the thermostat. Those can provide heat when the outside unit can’t; and I believe they are used to defrost the outside unit.

      There are “hybrid” systems that include a furnace rather than resistive heating elements. If it gets so cold the heat pump can’t handle it, it lights the furnace. This is perhaps an upgrade for folks who live with an air conditioner plus furnace system; basically your furnace doesn’t light as often, instead your air conditioner runs in reverse.

      • LukeMedia@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Where in North Carolina? I’ve grown up and west NC, have since moved to mid-NC, never seen a house with a heat pump.