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Heat Pumps: the Future of Home Heating 

Technology Connections
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It's so cold that it's hot.
Hey! So there have been a LOT of developments in the air-source heat pump space. A replacement for Part 2 is now live:
• Why Heat Pumps are Imm...
I referenced a lot of old videos in this one. Here they are, in clickity linkity form!
Chest Freezers; What they tell us about designing for X
• Chest Freezers; What t...
Old-fashioned rice cookers are extremely clever
• Old-fashioned rice coo...
Reusable handwarmers that get hot by freezing
• Reusable handwarmers t...
I also made passing references to
Forced-air Furnaces: The What, Why, and How
• Forced-air Furnaces: T...
and
Portable Air Conditioners - Why you shouldn't like them
• Portable Air Condition...
If you'd like to learn about Ground Source (Geothermal) heat pumps, you can check out this video • Ground Source / Geothe...
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27 фев 2021

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Комментарии : 10 тыс.   
@TechnologyConnections
@TechnologyConnections 3 года назад
Hello! Here's a comment with some extra info on efficiency and the metering devices used in heat pumps. First: my wording on the efficiency drop in the cold was sloppy, and it sounds like I'm suggesting the need for defrosting is the only reason it loses efficiency. It is _a_ reason, but not the biggest one - that's simply that as the outdoor temperature gets colder, it's harder for the refrigerant to absorb heat because the temperature difference between it and the air gets smaller. In fact, in the clip when it was -10°, it wasn't building much frost at all because it was very dry. But that was so cold that the refrigerant could barely capture any energy, which is why its output was tepid. And to be clear, its rating down to 5° doesn't mean it operates at full efficiency at that temperature. That's just the lowest temperature that it can sustain its rated heating output. Re: metering devices. I still somewhat suspect that the mini-split has a capillary tube and largely because of its cost. It was surprisingly inexpensive (this unit was about $1000, but the smallest units from this same manufacture only cost $750 and are fully capable heat pumps). If you use a thermal expansion valve or similar, you need one for each direction which adds to the system's complexity somewhat. I'd still argue that it hardly does - it is, after all, one or two small components of a large system. But simply reversing the refrigerant flow doesn't work on its own in systems that use these more complex metering devices. They'd need some additional piping and valve work (some such valves were visible in the demo rig) to accommodate two metering devices for each direction of flow.
@inactiveytchannel
@inactiveytchannel 3 года назад
:)
@Thomas_Nookington
@Thomas_Nookington 3 года назад
second one to reply! :)
@johnxina2465
@johnxina2465 3 года назад
Amazing video I was really anticipating this one, AND A CONNEXTRAS EPILOG, lovely
@zyansheep
@zyansheep 3 года назад
Heaters = inefficient
@IMJustSomeGuy100
@IMJustSomeGuy100 3 года назад
Most have EEV’s or electronic expansion valves. Only one valve is required in the outdoor unit this is why the small line needs to be insulated. As in cooling mode the small line is now a low pressure liquid line.
@mrflamewars
@mrflamewars 3 года назад
If it's not absolute zero there's some energy. Let's steal it!
@inactiveytchannel
@inactiveytchannel 3 года назад
If efficiency is not 100%, make it
@nothing-mm8ui
@nothing-mm8ui 3 года назад
e
@tirex3673
@tirex3673 3 года назад
even if it is a completely empty vacuum there is still some energy
@Jaymac720
@Jaymac720 3 года назад
@@inactiveytchannel the second law of thermodynamics states that mechanical devices cannot be 100% efficient
@GetsugaTensho85
@GetsugaTensho85 3 года назад
NO ONE WILL EVER KNOW!
@Altoclarinets
@Altoclarinets 3 года назад
my mother: shut the door, we ain't paying to air condition the entire neighborhood alec: ... what if you were
@Kyle4OH8
@Kyle4OH8 3 года назад
Lmao
@CorbyCave
@CorbyCave 3 года назад
I was at a friends house once in the winter and her mother came in and yelled at us for having the door open. She said, 'I'm not heating up the whole neighboorhood, here!' I looked at her and replied, 'Not in that bathrobe, you aren't...' I didn't know someone could throw a wooden spoon that hard.
@MrGothicruler666
@MrGothicruler666 3 года назад
Hey Vsauce, Alec here
@bencheevers6693
@bencheevers6693 3 года назад
Excellent comment, so much creativity and memery in RU-vid comments sometimes, finding the best ones always makes me smile
@josegljr
@josegljr 3 года назад
@@MrGothicruler666 I totally read the og comments in vsauce fashion. Hearing the music in the background after I read it.
@cigargiraffe181
@cigargiraffe181 Год назад
This video ended up inspiring me to go into an HVAC career, I just got hired as an apprentice :) thanks for the great content!
@mrofnocnon
@mrofnocnon 5 месяцев назад
It's a great career, just don't believe the heat pump b/s.
@RuffGardens
@RuffGardens 5 месяцев назад
How ya liking it my man?
@June-xm4ef
@June-xm4ef 5 месяцев назад
@@mrofnocnonnever seen anyone get through a winter with just their heat pump. They always gotta kick the heat strips in their air handler on or they have a dual fuel gas furnace/ heat pump combo.
@mrofnocnon
@mrofnocnon 5 месяцев назад
@@June-xm4efAs a HVAC tech in Canada I've never seen it either. Will people realize?
@coleBlap
@coleBlap 4 месяца назад
@@mrofnocnonexactly what I was gonna say lol
@Frost_smitten
@Frost_smitten Месяц назад
HVAC tech from the EU here, I'm probably late to the party on this but just wanted to add, most mini splits with variable frequency compressors don't use capillary tubes or TXVs but electronic expansion valves for even more adjustability and efficiency and they're usually in the outdoor unit and not the indoor one which is why insulation of the copper piping from outside to inside is so important as well. Anyway, love your content, keep doing what you're doing!
@thomasphillips885
@thomasphillips885 3 года назад
When your entire upload history is a prequel series for a single video.
@lynnbabe678
@lynnbabe678 3 года назад
Haha! Everytime the links popped up, I thought, "I'm glad I already watched those, it has all led to this!"
@kalibos
@kalibos 3 года назад
Technology Connections Cinematic Universe
@walnutsandbeastiality866
@walnutsandbeastiality866 3 года назад
I love pumps! The greatest feeling you can get in a gym or the most satisfying feeling you can get in the gym is *_the pump._* Let's say you train your biceps, blood is rushing in to your muscles and that's what we call *the pump.* Your muscles get a really tight feeling like your skin is going to explode any minute and its really tight and its like someone is blowing air into your muscle and it just blows up and it feels different, it feels fantastic. It's as satisfying to me as cumming is, you know, as in having sex with a woman and cumming. So can you believe how much I am in heaven? I'm like... _getting the feeling of cumming in the gym; I'm getting the feeling of _*_cumming at home;_*_ I'm getting the feeling of _*_cumming backstage;_*_ when I pump up, when I pose out in front of 5000 people I get the same feeling, so _*_I am cumming day and night._* It's terrific, right? So you know... I'm in heaven.
@Brellic
@Brellic 3 года назад
@@kalibos Yep, this is his Infinity War.
@mesientogut6701
@mesientogut6701 3 года назад
Walnuts and Bestiality, is this the new and best copy pasta?
@Gamecrazy721
@Gamecrazy721 3 года назад
This video is the linchpin of the Technology Connections Cinematic Universe
@Arbiter099
@Arbiter099 3 года назад
Alec is a smarter character than we've had before, if we can get him working...
@MrCheeze
@MrCheeze 3 года назад
He really made the "Connections" part pull its weight in this episode!
@Yootzkore
@Yootzkore 3 года назад
Yep. It's all heat pumps. Always has been.
@daydev2599
@daydev2599 3 года назад
Phase change was a surprise tool that will help us later.
@TehVulpez
@TehVulpez 3 года назад
If only we could connect Teletext and refrigeration cycles somehow.
@WarrenGarabrandt
@WarrenGarabrandt Год назад
We installed mini-split heat pumps on our house this year, and so far, we've noticed a significantly lower energy bill both during summer and now in winter. Your videos on heat pumps are a big reason why we did this. Thanks for making these videos. It's a small thing, but these videos are making the world a better place.
@miguelperdomo786
@miguelperdomo786 Год назад
Mini splits suck when they break
@ssmfernando
@ssmfernando 8 месяцев назад
@@miguelperdomo786Buy a Daikin or Mitsubishi, They never break.
@davidwalsh5756
@davidwalsh5756 6 месяцев назад
We had a Daikin central coil installed in our forced hot air furnace in 2022, had it removed, no heat, mold in the return vents and the dealer did not have the skill sets to integrate the unit with our furnace. At 0C these units spend too much time in defrost, thereby robbing what little heat you got from it. We live in Eastern Canada, minus 20 regularly occurs, we kept our oil furnace.The technology sucks! It is a big "connection job" on the consumer. I'm 73 and this is the worst heating appliance we ever owned. The government that forced this on us will be gone after the next election along with the carbon tax on heating fuel it imposed on us.
@WarrenGarabrandt
@WarrenGarabrandt 6 месяцев назад
@@davidwalsh5756 I would argue that the technology doesn't suck, but you were sold an inappropriate unit. If you live in a region that routinely sees temps below the efficient operating range of a particular heat pump, then you're going to have a bad time. Most places in the world don't routinely see -20. If I had bought a snow mobile thinking I was going to use it to commute to work regularly but I lived in Texas (I don't), I could easily say the snow mobile technology sucks because it won't work on bare pavement, but clearly the problem i would be having is a misapplication of the technology instead.
@elikarpinski2460
@elikarpinski2460 3 месяца назад
​@@davidwalsh5756 sounds like the dealers didn't know what they were doing. usually a system like that is referred to as "dual fuel" and the heat pump is only used for low loads, with the oil/gas furnace acting as emergency heat for when the temperature outside is too low for the heat pump to operate efficiently.
@per-olamjomark7452
@per-olamjomark7452 Год назад
Fun to watch. I live in Sweden and close to 60 percent of all Swedish detached houses have a heat pump. The number of houses with heat pumps has also increased by almost 50 percent since 2009.
@stripe330
@stripe330 Год назад
I live in Sweden too, i lived in an old apartment complex with direct heating. I literally bought a house in order to survive this winter, heat pumps truly are a blessing!
@balokurd17
@balokurd17 Год назад
Don't hesitate to switch on your heat pump at full power during the daytime. It's much easier for your device to 'pump' the calories when the sun is still shining. I live at high altitude and I stop my heatpump in the late afternoon when it's getting very cold and switch to wood during the night
@Kangenpower7
@Kangenpower7 Год назад
@@balokurd17, Yes I agree that running the heat pump during the day is much more heat per hour and a little more heat per KW of power used. I have a thermometer on my hot gas line going into my indoor unit. At 47F yesterday the temperature was 147, while this morning at 29F outside, the temperature was only 117F. So setting the temperature a little warmer during the day will save electricity overall.
@jasonw98
@jasonw98 Год назад
Stay tuned! Some "Nordic weather certified" multi split heat pumps are available soon in those countries.
@wolw66
@wolw66 Год назад
I thought it was fun too. My sister lives in England and for them this is something new.... My previous heat pump was installed by my father, some 30 years ago. I replaced it a couple of years ago (same brand - Toshiba). I have a separate meter on it so I can see exactly how much electricity it draws. 272KWh is the maximum I've managed a month, and that would be during winter with cold spells below -20°C. Remember to buy a larger unit than you need, set max compressor power to 75%, set fan to "Max" (it will only go to full when needed).
@MegaBrokenstar
@MegaBrokenstar 2 года назад
This channel is basically the modern version of old school public access programming. I could totally imagine watching this on PBS at 11pm. Really cool that people still watch this type of content nowadays. Getting smarter via entertainment is an amazing use of free time.
@jonasdatlas4668
@jonasdatlas4668 3 года назад
Yay, Technology Connections finally made that heat pump video we’ve all been waiting for!
@MrManniG
@MrManniG 3 года назад
Now well await the Teletext Video he promised Ages ago
@Kyle4OH8
@Kyle4OH8 3 года назад
I can finnaly sleep through the night
@WhenDoesTheVideoActuallyStart
@WhenDoesTheVideoActuallyStart 3 года назад
Bi gang bi gang bi gang
@Slushee
@Slushee 3 года назад
Nice pfp
@teh201d
@teh201d 3 года назад
This is the culmination of the Technology Connections cinematic universe!
@partycrab9494
@partycrab9494 Год назад
He truly is The Engineering Guy for household appliances. I can't wait for the geothermal lecture!
@WideAwakeHuman
@WideAwakeHuman Год назад
That’s exactly what I’m wanting lol
@pick26
@pick26 Год назад
If I were a science teacher, I would never do any teaching...I would just have the kids watch this channel every day. What a gem!
@jusjaisinghani8179
@jusjaisinghani8179 3 года назад
I was happy to hear at the end of a 35 min video that this was just part 1, tells me how much I love your content.
@nslouka90
@nslouka90 3 года назад
*CED flashbacks*
@keri-lynnmiller7501
@keri-lynnmiller7501 3 года назад
One of the perks of being hearing impaired is that I always have subtitles turned on and therefore catch things like “Coefficient of smooth jazz” and it makes me feel happy. :)
@myclamish
@myclamish 3 года назад
I leave subtitles on just because I like to read as well as listen, and even after that I'm still not sure if I can identify what the coefficient of smooth jazz sounds like... XD edit: wait a sec, did you grow up in north west ontario?
@keri-lynnmiller7501
@keri-lynnmiller7501 3 года назад
@@myclamish probably an imaginary number :) Nope! Why do you ask? Now I’m wondering if coefficient of smooth jazz is a particularly niche slang term in Northern Ontario.
@myclamish
@myclamish 3 года назад
@@keri-lynnmiller7501 yeah it's all about the coefficient of smooth jazz up there, it's the only sounds you can hear through the 18 layers of jacket to keep the cold out :p i only asked because i realized afterwards that i knew someone named keri-lynn that i grew up with who was also hearing impared...what are the chances.
@mickwolf1077
@mickwolf1077 3 года назад
Haha, that comment made me feel happy
@TheMsr47gaming
@TheMsr47gaming 3 года назад
@@myclamish most peaceful commet thread, I didn't know the coefficient of Smooth jazz was the answer to world peace.
@spooda1237
@spooda1237 11 месяцев назад
I live in Australia, so it doesn't get as cold in the winter here as it does in North America, but in the winter it can get from between 0-10 degrees C. And my old house was entirely heated by heat pumps. There was like 6 split systems in the house, they worked great
@purpleblueunicorn
@purpleblueunicorn Год назад
Just installed my first heat pump this winter and it's amazing. I undersized it at 12k BTU for a 1500 ft2 main floor, it's not much more powerful than a toaster and it kept 22C indoors. It's a 14 hspf rated for -26C and averaged 1.4 COP when it was -26C including the defrost (15min per hour). I'm going to install another small one for my basement now and maybe one for the pool!
@Harcix
@Harcix 7 месяцев назад
Where are you at? Whats the average winter temp outside ?
@purpleblueunicorn
@purpleblueunicorn 7 месяцев назад
@@Harcix In a city north of Montreal, QC. We average 14 days a year with temperatures under -4f. You can look up those stats. I modelled my calculations for worst case of 0F and will be using auxiliary heat or let the temperature drop when it gets worse.
@purpleblueunicorn
@purpleblueunicorn 7 месяцев назад
And update, it used 150kWh each month for the summer, meaning it cost me 9$ per month to operate and kept my house cool all summer for June, July, August. It's amazingly efficient. Still planning on installing one for my basement that I used to keep at 8C in winter.
@LevelNoneMusic
@LevelNoneMusic 3 года назад
I remember subscribing when you were at around 150k subs, and I prayed that WHEN you hit 1 million, the videos would stay the same, and they have. This is honestly one of the best channels ever. You've taught me a lot more than anyone else could, and about things that are actually interesting. Thank you for staying true to edutainment. I honestly think you would make an amazing teacher.
@Kyle4OH8
@Kyle4OH8 3 года назад
I just noticed he hit over 1 milli too I've been watching this channel for a few years now still the same great content
@johnsmith1474
@johnsmith1474 3 года назад
You should realize how pitiful your compliment is, everything every stated here is covered in JR HS (or before by kids who bother to show some scientific curiosity in a library).
@Eric2300jeep
@Eric2300jeep 3 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 And you should realize how much none of us care about your bitter, elitist attitude 😏
@csl110
@csl110 3 года назад
@@Eric2300jeep He's emotionally unintelligent and complaining about a "lack of scientific curiosity". Notice the irony? Not everyone has the same priorities.
@SomePotato
@SomePotato 3 года назад
​@@johnsmith1474 Not at all. I came for the VCR and analog TV videos a couple of years ago. I'm not from the US, but I doubt you covered Betamax and PAL vs NTSC in high school over there. Edit: The only thing that changed over the years are the production values, and they only got better.
@razvanmazilu6284
@razvanmazilu6284 3 года назад
Years of Technology Connections have prepared me for this.
@janmelantu7490
@janmelantu7490 3 года назад
The long-awaited heat pump episode
@nuvaboy
@nuvaboy 3 года назад
Next is Teletext!
@thekingoffailure9967
@thekingoffailure9967 3 года назад
I feel like I just took the final exam on a years-long course. Except, y'know, without the heart palpitating panic attacks that take months off my life.
@jenasaraus
@jenasaraus Год назад
Thank you so much for this video, my HVAC technician and I had a disagreement today about if heat pumps can still work under 40F. He REFUSED to believe it’s possible. I was doubting my own sanity and I see now it is in fact possible!
@soulfuzz368
@soulfuzz368 3 месяца назад
My neighbour has one and every time it gets that cold I see him out there trying to chip the ice away from the exhaust.
@PaulB-jx9nn
@PaulB-jx9nn 3 месяца назад
Our Heatpump had a COP over the entire year of higher than 5 in northern germany using R290 as refrigerant. Heat Pumps truly are amazing. Even with the high prices for electricity here it is quite a bit cheaper than burning gas + no chimney.
@rockyo59
@rockyo59 3 года назад
When I was about ten years old, 50 years ago, I asked my father why we couldn't put the outside part of the window AC inside by flipping it around to warm the house in the winter. I didn't know the way it worked at the time but I do now.
@abd4620
@abd4620 3 года назад
Ahead of your time sir
@rockyo59
@rockyo59 3 года назад
@Bruce Wang I think you have that backwards I would have been kicked today not 50 years ago
@kirkfranks1
@kirkfranks1 3 года назад
Because the outlet in inside the house :)
@seanb3516
@seanb3516 3 года назад
I was working for LUSH manufacturing about 20 years back. They were trying to pour massage bars however the room was too hot. They wired up a window AC unit and placed it in the middle of the room. Being the son of a Mech Eng I was apoplectic trying to explain how this particular thermodynamic setup was worse than nothing. Seems funny now however at the time I was truly flailing. XD I was working with stupid people...a lot of them were real pretty so, six of one......
@miked9000
@miked9000 3 года назад
While it certainly would work, the amount of energy that it could pull from the outside(you never mentioned the outside temp), would make it colossally inefficient.
@midimusicforever
@midimusicforever 3 года назад
Meanwhile in Sweden , I'm annoyed that my heat pump doesn't cool. It would have been sweet to have air conditioning in the summers!
@LeoInterVir
@LeoInterVir 3 года назад
But it does cool... you're just cooling the outside air. In the US we use heat pumps to heat water for swimming pools. Their exhaust is cool air and when in air restricted areas the temperature gets even colder. Edit: They also have units that can work both ways and cool water. They are generally more expensive.
@midimusicforever
@midimusicforever 3 года назад
@@LeoInterVir Cool the inside air I mean of course.
@eleftherios11
@eleftherios11 3 года назад
You can get heat pumps for both heating and cooling
@ajm5007
@ajm5007 3 года назад
@@LeoInterVir A friend of mine's VERY wealthy parent have a pool with heat pump that's integrated into the changing room's A/C. The heat is transferred from that room to the pool.
@midimusicforever
@midimusicforever 3 года назад
@@eleftherios11 I know, but mine doesn't.
@esrevinu.
@esrevinu. Год назад
Your videos are so informative and well put together, every time I watch something I end up learning something new or seeing something from a different perspective. Well done!
@a9ball1
@a9ball1 5 месяцев назад
What an outstanding video. I've known for decades how AC works. Could even draw a system for you. But I could not figure out how heat pumps work. Reason, no one told me that the condenser could also be an evaporater. That one little thing that you took the time to share saved me! Thanks 👍
@jiggaman508
@jiggaman508 3 года назад
I love this channel, my girl seems to always catch me watching these videos and asks why I'm suddenly interested in dishwashers and air conditioners lol.
@AleksandarIvanov69
@AleksandarIvanov69 3 года назад
Cause u got a 🧠
@Tenebrarium
@Tenebrarium 3 года назад
Haha, "Not now hun, I'm watching a video about dishwashers!"
@lordjaashin
@lordjaashin 3 года назад
@@Tenebrarium why are you watching video about me? - her probably
@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis
@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis 3 года назад
@@lordjaashin 🤣👌 "ᴡᴏᴍАɴ=ᴅɪꜱʜᴡᴀꜱʜᴇʀ" ᴠᴇʀʏ ꜰᴜɴɪ ʙʀo 👌🤣10/10 ᴊᴏᴋᴋᴇ ᴠᴇʀʏ ʜaʟaʟ ʙʀo👌😆
@lordjaashin
@lordjaashin 3 года назад
@@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis thanks brah. i like it when my audience laugh their tits off to my kosher comedy.
@yeah493
@yeah493 3 года назад
I feel like I’m in safe hands when I watch Technology Connections.
@Xzanah
@Xzanah 3 года назад
Sure, those hands that hold you are safe... But are you...?
@gioiadelsapere
@gioiadelsapere 3 года назад
I love how he starts most videos start with a pun
@HotShot-qy1gx
@HotShot-qy1gx 3 года назад
His voice is like a warm blanket
@bland9876
@bland9876 3 года назад
Allstate
@MrSilverad0
@MrSilverad0 3 года назад
For me it's like a lullaby. Everything in this show is me likey. Please don't change!
@Rosher18
@Rosher18 Год назад
I live and grew up in Marion County in Oregon and all 4 houses I've lived in or gotten to know well have had a combination heat pump/air conditioning unit somewhere out behind or alongside the house. This isn't obscure technology to me, but I was impressed with how well-explained this was, and I now feel better about letting the A/C or heat pump run when it's sunny and my 12.6 kW array can help feed that hungry compressor with the 2100 Watts it wants to keep my house warm.
@jimshorts4317
@jimshorts4317 5 месяцев назад
This is the most thorough and valuable explanation of heat pumps and, really, HVAC systems for us normal people. Thank you so much. This deserves a lot of praise. Very well done, your effort is highly appreciated.
@5roundsrapid263
@5roundsrapid263 3 года назад
In Scotland, they actually use piles of moss as fuel. Yes, they use peat humps. 😝
@petertr2000
@petertr2000 3 года назад
See, I thought you powered the entire country on hatred of the English? ;-)
@balokurd17
@balokurd17 Год назад
I don't think it's very effective in Scotland because the humidity is very high. Even if it's colder in Siberia, there's less clouds and less humidity !
@ThioJoe
@ThioJoe 3 года назад
It feels like latent heat is basically an exploit in the universe we're taking advantage of.
@Aquatarkus96
@Aquatarkus96 3 года назад
Just gathering and moving hot from one place to another :)
@xtranormal2350
@xtranormal2350 3 года назад
I always think the same thing about hydraulics as well as other simple machines. Literally just exploits of physics.
@Christopher-N
@Christopher-N 3 года назад
It's basically a battery, a form of stored energy. Interestingly, there are places in the universe that are colder than the current temperature of the universe. The Boomerang Nebula has been measured at 1 kelvin, while the average temperature of the universe is measured at 2.73 K (using the CMB).
@ebenolivier2762
@ebenolivier2762 3 года назад
All machines are exploits of nature: A water wheel is just an exploit of gravity, internal combustion engines is an explore of chemical energy, computers using transistors is an exploit of how electromagnetism works etc. A machine just arranges a natural phenomenon in such a way that it's useful to us.
@davidjgomm
@davidjgomm 3 года назад
You don't get owt for nowt, as they say in Yorkshire. Mark my words - extracting heat from from one part of the ecosystem to move it into another will have unforeseen (ie bad) consequences. I don't know what they will be but 'twas ever thus. Think your exploiting the universe? Think again...entropy is a one-way street.
@nemoexnuqual3643
@nemoexnuqual3643 Год назад
Absolutely love mine! My area does get extremely cold, mine is a “hyper heat” model for -20(f) and below -20 (actually a little above that) it has trouble, so resistive and wood pellet are required for a couple months. My split unit compressor has saved me hundreds throughout the year.
@BrawlerTheSmokyDutchMan
@BrawlerTheSmokyDutchMan Год назад
Thanks man, I had trouble wrapping my head around this concept. Your amazing explanation blew my skepticism away.
@fifzeppelin
@fifzeppelin 2 года назад
2:09 I have an MS in chemical engineering. I know very well how the refrigeration cycle works. Yet I refuse to skip any explanation this channel does about it. It's just that good.
@Crazy_Diamond_75
@Crazy_Diamond_75 2 года назад
I agree. He has a way of boiling down (heh) topics into their essentials, giving "Aha!" moments even to things you already know about.
@PhreakinPhilip
@PhreakinPhilip 2 года назад
Same here, don’t think I was ever told it was because of the exploitation of latent heat. Glad you were taught adequately on thermo. My professors sucked so not much has stuck around. However, I still can visualize the cycle I drew and labeled sophomore year
@polpotube
@polpotube 2 года назад
why would you deny yourself the self validation of "yeah! right! I knew it!" ?
@dlchector
@dlchector 2 года назад
Don’t feel weird, I’m HVAC instructor and didn’t have any intentions of skipping this video. Nice to see the information from a different person. Will never skip one of his videos.
@JamesQMurphy
@JamesQMurphy 2 года назад
B.S. ChemE here… didn’t skip either.
@justafan5179
@justafan5179 3 года назад
There was a "Blondie Comic" where Dagwood has the air conditioner in backwards, and Blondie asks "are you air-conditioning the outside, dear?" to which Dagwood responds, "Nope, I'm heating the house." It captures perfectly the irony of the situation you present.
@ianship5058
@ianship5058 3 года назад
They do work if the ambient is above -5 deg C
@justafan5179
@justafan5179 3 года назад
@@ianship5058 Agree completely... That's the irony. The comic treats it as ingenious on Dagwood's part, but ultimately a "bless his heart" stupid, sigh from Blondie, for not "just" using a conventional heater... I wish I could find it.
@hkelly1623
@hkelly1623 3 года назад
It’s exactly what a reversible heat pump does, only with a reversing valve instead of turning the entire unit around. A heat pump package unit could be a conventional A/C only sealed system without a reversing valve if ductwork was set up to change the airflow. It must not be efficient as it's not done.
@EastDallasKicks
@EastDallasKicks 2 года назад
@@hkelly1623 Aren’t heat pumps a thing of the past/present and not a thing of the future? I see a reversing valve in our cheap condenser I think it’s an ameristar unit.
@2009dudeman
@2009dudeman 2 года назад
@@EastDallasKicks Not necessarily. There is a large market for them in many places. You just don't see them a ton in mini-split configurations here in the states. They are instead integrated into the traditional HVAC system. Normal AC is just a heat pump it's just that most of them are one way. Doing away with heat pumps would be doing away with Air conditioning, Fridges, Freezers, etc. They are all just heat pumps, using them for heat is still a better bang for your buck than electric heat. I haven't run the numbers for gas heat.
@shahab_shawn_siahpoosh
@shahab_shawn_siahpoosh Год назад
One of the best videos, I've seen to explain and justify the importance of using heat pumps.
@juppster5694
@juppster5694 Год назад
Excellent, as always! Thank you for such readily-graspable explanations 👍 Looking forward to the next one on geothermal.
@jamesgates1074
@jamesgates1074 3 года назад
Entropy: "No!, you can't just concentrate latent heat wherever you want" Humans: "Ha, Ha, compressor go burrrr"
@e.c.listening326
@e.c.listening326 3 года назад
That’s a neat summary 👍
@johnsmith1474
@johnsmith1474 3 года назад
Hate stupid two-liners.
@nonchip
@nonchip 3 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 good that this wasn't one then, but why'd you comment that here since it's unrelated? :P
@pingaslord9726
@pingaslord9726 3 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 Wouldn't call it a two liner but you're right. Stupid meme formats like this are used so often. RU-vid comments the the worst offenders
@Mike__B
@Mike__B 3 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 Hate stupid one-liners who only criticize... So that's why this will have another line, because that OP comment was brilliant!
@maximum3611
@maximum3611 3 года назад
The day after this video comes out, my thermodynamics class starts going over second law and heat pumps. This got me ahead of the game. Amazing
@code051
@code051 3 года назад
my thermodynamics exam is tomorrow lol
@Stark81766
@Stark81766 3 года назад
Here's a shock. The laws can be broken.
@Kraus-
@Kraus- 3 года назад
@@Stark81766 Wait. That's illegal.
@Stark81766
@Stark81766 3 года назад
@@Kraus- nope. Just needs the right setup/config. I know it's possible.
@nahometesfay1112
@nahometesfay1112 3 года назад
@@Stark81766 Not sure if you got the joke
@jjdatuner
@jjdatuner Год назад
Awesome information! This is actually a very common heating solution here in Sweden. We have a air/water system in our house that functions like this. 👍
@SsspraakForsskkarring
@SsspraakForsskkarring Год назад
You are very effective at explaining physics and technology in an easy-to-understand way, and it is even quite enjoyable to consume it too 🙂
@sparrowbe4k802
@sparrowbe4k802 3 года назад
This channel must be in the top 0.1% of all channels out there. No constant repetition to pad the content, no half naked women for clickbait, no constant merching or sponsor messages. Just good solid research and no nonsense compilation of the facts. Excellent. On a par with Veritasium, Tom Scott & ElectroBOOM.
@tangydiesel1886
@tangydiesel1886 3 года назад
This, Project Farm, and Scott Manley are my go to channels.
@SolarWebsite
@SolarWebsite 3 года назад
If you like these channels, you'll love Tech Ingredients, I'm sure.
@max_kl
@max_kl 3 года назад
I'll add Applied Science to the list
@quietkrs
@quietkrs 3 года назад
If I had TC as my science or math teacher in school, I imagine my life would have gone in a whole different direction. Thanks for teaching this 30-yr-old something new with every video!
@cheapbastard990
@cheapbastard990 Год назад
You are 100% correct about heat pumps being extremely common in the south. I am in Northern Mississippi and it's pretty standard here. I suspect they are so uncommon up north because the companies selling them don't want to deal with the massive number of complaining customers for those times when it doesn't work because it's too cold. Up north, there are typically weeks of that several times every winter. Here there are maybe a couple of days like that in several typical winters. It seems to me that there should be an alternative though. You could have a two stage system using two compressors and two refrigerants and easily extract heat from outside air even at 50 below! Yes, the 2nd compressor would make it far less efficient when it's 50 degrees outside. But it could be designed to only use the 2nd stage when it drops below say 15 degrees. That's around the temperature that heat pump efficiency really starts to drop off.
@ryanvandy1615
@ryanvandy1615 Год назад
In Michigan it is rare to see a home heated with a heat pump. And the ones that do use heat pumps are usually equipped with a gas or resistance heat backup.
@cheapbastard990
@cheapbastard990 Год назад
@@ryanvandy1615 Yep, they don't save enough to justify the cost up there because it simply gets too cold too regularly. Heat pumps are extremely efficient at temperatures above 40 degrees, but below that they drop off steeply, At 30 degrees they still work, but you aren't saving nearly as much. At 20, you are pretty much breaking even. Below that, they are virtually worthless, so some other means of heat has to be used. Here in the south, that's only a night or two on average per winter, but up north it's all day and night for weeks at a time every winter. While the heat pump might save you some money in the fall and spring it's not useful in the winter and so not a very good investment. You still need far better heating than we have down here and makes more sense to put your money into that system.
@blucanyon322
@blucanyon322 9 месяцев назад
Hey I’m from the MS coast, still never even seen a furnace heated home haha
@judevecoli865
@judevecoli865 Год назад
Thanks for this. I moved to Florida from Rhode Island a couple years ago. I was told my "heating system" was a heat pump. I honestly had no idea what that was. Or how it related to the increasing popularity of the wall mount units you have. I have serviced my own gas heaters over the years, and also understand a traditional electric system that pumps the water from room to room. Throw in radiant heat and both active and passive solar systems, and I felt I had a pretty good handle on heating systems. As soon as you explained the basics my brain went "aha" and I saw where you were going. I should have asked sooner. Not that it changes anything. I am certainly not qualified to work on refrigerant based systems. So repairs will be left to the professionals. At least now I will be able to ask questions and understand the answers if my system needs work.
@KevinLyda
@KevinLyda 3 года назад
I'm converting my house in Galway, Ireland from oil (kerosene) to an air to water heat pump. Happy to shoot some video and some text explaining it as we get it installed.
@t3hd0n
@t3hd0n 3 года назад
"its just an ac but backwards" me: *installs my ac backwards for the winter* this can't possibly go wrong lol
@radnukespeoplesminds
@radnukespeoplesminds 3 года назад
You just need a bucket incase you have any condensate. Also earplugs.
@buddyclem7328
@buddyclem7328 3 года назад
"Turn up the heat." "I can't reach the thermostat anymore!"
@shawnpitman876
@shawnpitman876 3 года назад
@@MikePerreman how? It's always going to be below target temperature.
@tnast
@tnast 3 года назад
@@shawnpitman876 You could always pull some trickery with a little circuit reverse engineering, and relocating the thermostat inside. Granted it'd be more work than it's worth, but It's still doable. Basically just an opposite style thermistor than what's already equipped.
@wiredforstereo
@wiredforstereo 3 года назад
It would kinda work, they're just not designed to handle frozen heat exchangers like a heat pump is.
@nickk.4140
@nickk.4140 Год назад
In Korea for a business trip and I was surprised to recognize that almost every building where I am is heated by heat pumps despite during the coldest parts of winter it getting into the single digit negatives (F). Caused some issues on the coldest nights as it would have to pause to defrost periodically but I was able to use a space heater to flatten out the curve in temperature fluctuations.
@Hagemann666
@Hagemann666 Год назад
I'm building a new home right now and I installed an air source heat pump based largely on the information gleaned from this video. Thanks!
@psyko2666
@psyko2666 3 года назад
I'm teaching thermodynamics in my class right now, and this is perfect!
@CAPSLOCKPUNDIT
@CAPSLOCKPUNDIT 3 года назад
"Today we are going to demonstrate how heat pumps harness the power of Maxwell's Demon to isolate high energy particles from a mass of randomly moving molecules, and transport them across a thermal barrier."
@nisbahmumtaz909
@nisbahmumtaz909 3 года назад
No matter how many times I hear it explained, refrigeration cycles are so goddamn magical science, it's really indistinguishable from fiction
@Gulyus
@Gulyus 3 года назад
Basically, what is exploited is that changing the phase and pressure changes the temperature seen by the opposite sides of the unit. It isn't magic so much as utilization of the laws of thermodynamics to our benefits.
@wiredforstereo
@wiredforstereo 3 года назад
It's really basic physics. You compress something, it gets hot. You release that pressure, it gets cold. An AC system is simply turning that concept into a continuous cycle.
@TheRealColBosch
@TheRealColBosch 3 года назад
Yes. Magic, like the OP said.
@beansnrice321
@beansnrice321 Год назад
My parent's heat pump kept heating their DeKalb, IL garage during the recent blizzard without issue. Heat pumps are amazing!
@nickpogoler
@nickpogoler Год назад
A few years ago I was responsible for the care and feeding of a dozen or so terribly arthritic heat pumps from the 60s that the school I worked at had for the classrooms. This was in Los Angeles. So they’ve been around in some form or another. Very informative video.
@Kangenpower7
@Kangenpower7 Год назад
I worked on a building that was SCE Headquarters in Long Beach CA, with a 1948 unit that is 4 compressor 100 hp each, R-12 heat pump with a water cooled condenser in the lower level of the basement garage, so it takes air from the garage to blow outside when running, no need to run additional fans in the garage. Of course in the heat pump mode, the water is shut off, but the fans run. Yes heat pumps have been around for a long time. I even own a 1978 heat pump water heater made my Airtemp. It looks like a upright window A/C unit with water lines to the condenser, to collect the heat to put into a water heater tank. It has a 13,500 Btu compressor, and can heat to 120F easy!
@EtherImperial
@EtherImperial 3 года назад
As someone who lives in the south, you have taught me something new about my A/C unit. I always thought that the heating mode was just turning on a space heater style system as it's commonly referred to here as the "heating coil". This also explains why it takes a minute to swap between heating and cooling.
@raptor1jec
@raptor1jec 3 года назад
As someone who's lived in the south, you weren't entirely wrong, actually. There is a resistive space heater type coil in there to supplement the heat pump. Our unit when I was a kid also had an "emergency heat" mode that only ran the heating coil. I assume that mode was there in case the compressor outside broke.
@dogleg6669
@dogleg6669 3 года назад
Heatpumps are common in warmer climates in the USA. I'm not sure about everywhere but in Texas atleast where I worked all heatpumps have an electric heating element installed and hooked to the "emergency" heat circuit of the thermostat. This is there to help compensate on really cold days below freezing when heatpumps start to loose efficiently.
@wiredforstereo
@wiredforstereo 3 года назад
It may be what you think. Some are. My brother-in-law only had resistance heating in his former house in Missouri. Just the way it came when he bought it. However, usually they're used to supplement rather than be the main source of heat.
@eggman9713
@eggman9713 3 года назад
@@raptor1jec Emergency heat mode was for either that scenario or one where older style heat pumps (like my old one before I replaced it last year) couldn't keep themselves defrosted during very cold conditions. Older units were quite dumb and ran on a combination of time and temperature and sometimes it was not sufficient (in my case, sustained 5F and below which is uncommon for this area). I had it happen a couple of times and my whole heat pump turned into a block of ice. Good thing electricity is cheap here.
@Thoroughly_Wet
@Thoroughly_Wet 3 года назад
"the future of home heating" *Me while listening to my 20 yo heat pump spooling up "The future is now, moderately aged man"
@GregHassler
@GregHassler 3 года назад
Same, since 2008
@douglas8568
@douglas8568 3 года назад
@@GregHassler I used this since the 80s , living in a third world country
@Mach141
@Mach141 3 года назад
these have been common in warmer climates for at least 30 years if not longer
@johnmiller8884
@johnmiller8884 3 года назад
Yup. Central Valley of California where a hard freeze (below 25 F) here is considered a natural disaster. Heat pumps are THE thing.
@timhartherz5652
@timhartherz5652 3 года назад
They've become the go-to heating system for new Houses about 20 Years ago around here (Germany). People seem to oftwn have a Hard time wrapping their head around how they work, I usually say "Its a fridge installed the Wrong Way around, where the warm Plate is on the inside."
@liambrock3831
@liambrock3831 Год назад
Installed these for years. Fantastic units!
@taladiv3415
@taladiv3415 Год назад
It is proof of success for this explanation video that I watched the whole 35 minutes without a reduction in my attention.👍
@xyzyxz6062
@xyzyxz6062 2 года назад
for 20 years I've been asking sales reps to explain heat pumps, how they work, and how my cost would go down as brochures and signs say. No one could tell me. Next door got a huge carrier unit installed I asked installers, they couldn't be bothered or didn't know. Now I know. THANK YOU SOOO MUCH!
@xr6lad
@xr6lad Год назад
Heat pumps do not work under certain temperatures. Below 2 degrees the part outside; the heat exchanger slats start to ice over and the heat coming out drops to negligible. Be better to get a blanket. Believe me I live in a cold area and it’s better to light a fire.
@tomdibble8983
@tomdibble8983 Год назад
@@xr6lad As stated in the video, it depends on (1) which heat pump you get (more expensive models continue being efficient to -20ºF), (2) how old it is (they have come a LONG way in the past ten years, so if you have an existing old heat pump you are basing complaints on that probably doesn't apply to a new model), and (3)what you mean by "do not work". They don't just stop working, but slow down their heat moving abilities. I'd say definitely when the COP reaches 1.0 it is definitely no longer "working", and a more conservative estimate would look at when the COP dips below the ~2.5 that it takes to be more efficient than natural gas. Realistically, you should compare it to what your "backup/emergency heating" system is. But, again, if you spend enough up front on your heat pump, it doesn't even cross the 2.5 "natural gas" barrier until it's below -20ºF, so clearly most people in the US can get a *lot* of efficiency out of a heat pump system. For instance, a Mitsubishi H2i has a COP of 2.88 at 5ºF and 2.5 at -13ºF, and it isn't the most deluxe air-source heat pump out there! Of course, if "money is no limit" the next video in this series on ground-sourced heat pumps should be very helpful (there, the cost is in excavating to install the ground source tubing, rather than in fancier electronics and more efficient compressors to squeeze more heat out of sub-zero air). The point is, though, even if you "couldn't" run your heat pump for 10 super-chilly nights in a year, they all have a backup heat source to switch to. Isn't using a high-efficiency heat pump for 90 nights and gas for 10 a better idea than gas for all 100?
@jerrymyahzcat
@jerrymyahzcat Год назад
@@xr6lad Not true. There are units rated to work down to at least -25°C. Also not everywhere in the world has gas available. I don’t unless I buy bottled gas.
@michaelsheffield6411
@michaelsheffield6411 Год назад
The installers may not know. They may have a job that takes 12 hours to do properly and would rather focus on that. If it snows a lot in your area, stick with the gas furnace. The wear and tear is too much on a system running 24hours, and the system he’s going to mention in the next video is so expensive to install that it’s not worth the little you save with greater efficiency
@DrakeKillah
@DrakeKillah Год назад
@@xr6lad I won’t believe you. I live in Norway. We know a thing or too about cold. And heat pumps are the standard for new houses here, has been for the past decade atleast. Way back in the day, heat pumps were useless below those temps. But the tech has moved forward, and they now work just fine down to -25°C. Yes, they lose efficiency, but are still a viable option, depending on factors like house size, room layout, insulation, etc. If you live in a place that might see temps below what a heat pump can handle, like in Norway, it’s recommended to have supplemental heat sources for those periods, but that’s again down to different factors per user.
@eddyo-fl9yh
@eddyo-fl9yh 3 года назад
Just a random comment. Thank you for taking your time to add subtitles. It's amazing since I am hard of hearing.
@ts46176
@ts46176 Год назад
The only channel on RU-vid that can both keep me awake and put me to sleep with the same video lol I love your channel, don't ever change a thing
@Towert7
@Towert7 Год назад
Hey TC, I'm like you and find this stuff cool. You might get a kick out of how large jets provide pressurized cool air to the cabin. They call it an air cycle machine (ACM). It's similar to an AC, but doesn't use a refrigerant. It still uses heat exchangers (radiators), but also uses a turbine (turbocharger). It's kind of cool how it works. They can't just take cold air from outside because it needs to be compressed to help people breath (air is not dense enough at altitude), so they bleed air off the jet engine compressor. That air is hot because it was compressed, too hot for the cabin, so they send it through the air cycle machine. If you get some time check it out, I think you'll enjoy it.
@damanorelse
@damanorelse 3 года назад
My desire to consolidate got me dreaming of a future when a house has one big refrigerant circuit that provides heating, hot water, fridges, freezers, and ACs.
@RGInquisitor
@RGInquisitor 3 года назад
Why? So if a single part of that entire circuit fails, it ALL goes down?
@matthewtuel2747
@matthewtuel2747 3 года назад
In commercial refrigeration (restaurants, grocery stores etc), it is common to use a shared circuit for the chillers, refrigerators, icemakers and what-not. I don't think you could share that with an A/C system but I also am not an expert at refrigeration. This helps keep the indoor air at a reasonable temp without over-taxing the A/C.
@WangChung81
@WangChung81 3 года назад
You can already do it really. Not only do they make "mini split" refrigerators but all you need to do is modify any fridge you want with a plate heat exchanger and run a water loop through it. Have a HVAC tech braze one on for you in place of the condenser, the run some PEX to the fridge.
@OrangeC7
@OrangeC7 3 года назад
@@RGInquisitor In theory, if you're consolidating it all to one system, then you could have two backup systems. On top of the main heat pump system, you have a backup heat pump and then auxiliary heating. I'm not an urban engineer/anyone else that would consider this, though, so there's probably something I'm missing
@RGInquisitor
@RGInquisitor 3 года назад
@@OrangeC7 Well you definitely could have backups, but a consolidated system in itself would already be very complex. Adding redundancy to each part of the system would be a lot more work than just having each part working independently.
@Soloist1983
@Soloist1983 3 года назад
Coming to this channel is like talking with my twin brother. Seriously, 99% of what you do is what we've discussed for years, save for of course the newer topics. Sadly, I lost my brother to leukemia, so in a really odd way, this channel is almost like being able to hang out with him again, which is comforting. Btw, we were both connoisseurs of Xmas lighting, still haven't found an off the shelf, non-garnish, mon-flickering, LED set yet :D
@edaten4205
@edaten4205 3 года назад
I’m sorry for your loss and I’m glad you’ve found a way to celebrate your brother. Even when bittersweet, I am always appreciative whenever I feel the joy from someone that’s gone.
@Blankult
@Blankult 2 года назад
R.I.P.
@loturzelrestaurant
@loturzelrestaurant 2 года назад
@@Blankult Hi. I ask around to see if someone would be interested in a lil Project of mine. Some people try to be the 180 Degree Opposite of Cancel-Culture and try to help RU-vid become less... well, lets say 'Messy' to use nice words only... ... Interested to hear a bit more?
@Blankult
@Blankult 2 года назад
@@loturzelrestaurant What is it?
@loturzelrestaurant
@loturzelrestaurant 2 года назад
@@Blankult Well, well, where do i start to explain? Basically, looking away from Issues is real popular. I guess you know that. And you surely knew about Cancel-Culture being 'bad'. Yes, it is. BUT did you knew that its 180 Degree Opposite does exist? Some people try to get stuff removed/deleted because they wanna help. Just like Real-Life has the Policephonenumber, RU-vid has the reportbutton. It exists for a Reason. Not for no Reason. So the idea is that Racism and much more is findable and reportworthy; a combination that should lead to... well... reportbutton-usage? Sorry, I'm not a big Speech-Maker, just some Guy who got many Covid-Deniers removed; this week alone; but well. It does not work 'enough', overall, but it works enough so that i got the Idea 'why not ask people to join the Fun?'
@ozzya7887
@ozzya7887 Год назад
Mind blow!!! 🤯 to have a system like this in an air induction system to work only till freezing and have the gas portion to kick in when freezing and below would be a great idea and more efficient I would think. Great video and explanation, keep up the good work!
@notbrianbradley
@notbrianbradley Год назад
I don't know why people don't think abstractly and think of "AC" (conditioning the air but only in the cold direction for some reason (well...of course)), a refridgerator, among some other appliances as just "applied heat pumps." I was actually surprised to see your title, as you have the earlier videos about how there needs to be a place to pump the heat so those inside AC units without a part outside don't work. But then I realized how helpful it would be and how (seemingly) silly it is we don't use the same heat pump for "AC" as we do heat. I'm glad you made this video because it really is as simple as having the temperature control "executor" would be that display that labels the compressor and evaborator twice. I suppose calling them the higher level category about them being one of two ends of the heat pump might help. Speaking of heat, I also want to thank you for those videos about ceramic room heaters (completely random other than concept association with heat). Anyway, great video as always. I know I'm late but that's video on demand platforms for ya.
@Caffeine_Addict_2020
@Caffeine_Addict_2020 Год назад
It’s really common that heat pumps are used for both AC and heat though. My place is a piece of garbage but we have a heat pump for both AC and heat; it sucks
@fhj007
@fhj007 3 года назад
This feels like the avengers endgame of technology connections
@Steets
@Steets 3 года назад
What you didn't see was the toast offscreen, which was being heated by the mini-split.
@FPSNecromancerBob
@FPSNecromancerBob 3 года назад
Latent heat "I am inevitable..."
@tommyagnello4100
@tommyagnello4100 3 года назад
This is only Infinity War. Endgame comes in part 2
@sebastiangorka200
@sebastiangorka200 3 года назад
no this is infinity war endgame is gonna be heatpumps part 2: underground heatpump
@davidthorne5715
@davidthorne5715 3 года назад
Plz stop comparing things to marvel and Harry Potter movies 😬
@SilverAura
@SilverAura 3 года назад
"Where ever there's a temperature gradient, nature is hot and bothered, frankly, and would very much like it to achieve equilibrium." This kind of wonderfully elegant wording and effortless delivery is the type of witty content I love to see.
@manoflego123
@manoflego123 3 года назад
I was casually scrolling and read this comment at the exact same time he said it and for a few seconds I though the matrix glitched lmao
@davidelson2728
@davidelson2728 Год назад
Brilliant explanation. You think you know how these systems work but listening to this chap explaining the system operation shows how much you don’t know.
@montagneverte
@montagneverte Год назад
I just built an apartment building that uses heat pumps down to -30C. It also has a third refrigerant line for the heat recovery. That lets certain people air condition if they are south facing and it lets the colder apartments use that rejected energy to heat.
@jamminwrenches860
@jamminwrenches860 3 года назад
My mom used to yell at me "I'm not air conditioning the whole neighborhood! Close the door! Showed you mom, now you ARE air conditioning the whole neighborhood now. In the winter anyway.
@GerBarne
@GerBarne 3 года назад
I live in a temperate to cold climate, so we'd have the heating on. If one of us dared open the window my mam would shout "close that window, we're heating the fucking sky!" Good times.
@mattbanks3517
@mattbanks3517 3 года назад
i hate my heat pump. I hate electric heat. Slow, dries your skin and turns off when i need it. I prefer an ethanol fire
@diablo.the.cheater
@diablo.the.cheater 3 года назад
@@mattbanks3517 heat is heat.
@mattbanks3517
@mattbanks3517 3 года назад
@@diablo.the.cheater yes but a propane heater or a simple wood/ethanol fire is instant heat and runs when i want it to run, electric heaters and heat pumps have stupid thermostats that turn off when they want to.
@jbetfifty5904
@jbetfifty5904 3 года назад
@Maiahi what? since when did your parents yelling at you become a bad thing?
@ofngol
@ofngol 3 года назад
34:06 "For now, stay warm." Me in the Philippines at 3:00am : - turns airconditioning on because it's too hot -
@Bagsy84
@Bagsy84 3 года назад
get a dehumidifier
@henryairconcepts2999
@henryairconcepts2999 3 года назад
In tropical countries, heatpumps only cool, less complicated system and last longer
@federicomarintuc
@federicomarintuc 3 года назад
@@henryairconcepts2999 I live in north Argentina and every year more models sold are hot/cold because we are little pussies when temperature goes below 10 C
@marlonmartins82
@marlonmartins82 3 года назад
@@henryairconcepts2999 I'm in Brazil, heat pump are more expensive and not useful. I barely use a oil heater at half power to sleep in some winter cold days.
@henryairconcepts2999
@henryairconcepts2999 3 года назад
@@marlonmartins82 I see. I live in NZ people live in pacific area and south east asia only have cooling heatpump. And it’s cheap to buy. Maybe around $300-400 including install for small heatpump like underr 1kw
@aaronpomeroy2579
@aaronpomeroy2579 Год назад
I didn’t learn much when watching this cuz I’m a thermodynamics nerd. HOWEVER, I wish I saw this when going through the refrigeration cycle for the first time. Phenomenal explanation
@alanmcrae8594
@alanmcrae8594 Год назад
Excellent presentation on a very important topic! As more & more people start to understand the energy efficiency of heat pumps and the necessity of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, we should start to see a more widespread adoption of heat pump technologies. You've done an excellent job of explaining both the how and the why of heat pumps for both heating & cooling. Liked & subscribed.
@johnmassey1016
@johnmassey1016 2 года назад
As an engineer, that was a brilliantly clear explanation on how refrigerators and heat pumps work. Well done, dude!!
@electrictroy2010
@electrictroy2010 Год назад
THE SPLIT HEAT PUMP doesn’t have built-in resistance heat? I thought that was standard backup heat for heat pumps. (That’s how my whole home unit.) .
@LongTrout
@LongTrout Год назад
They are still a piece of shit in Michigan for heat. They are hole in your pocket in the wintertime and don't keep you warm on cold days. Don't try to bullshit the HVAC installer/ Mechanical Contractor.
@redaceFR
@redaceFR 3 года назад
Hello ! I'm from France and I have some interesting things here. Members of my family are farmers, and because of the huge house they got, they had to find a good way to heat up the space without having to go bankrupt every winter. So they installed a heat pump as a main heater (for hot water and heating the interior). What's interesting is that they do not use a air heat pump, they use a water heat pump, let me explain. Because they have a huge need of water for the animals, they had to install their own pump in order to avoid paying too much to have water. The water is directly pumped from a water table below them. So the water is basically free. What the pump does is that it drain water from the water table and then suck up its heat until it reaches 4°C (so it doesn't freeze). Then the water is RETURNED TO THE WATER TABLE (it's not wasted). The main advantage is that the water is almost all the time around the same temperature because it comes from underground (around 12/14 °C if i remember correctly) so there is no problem in using it during really cold and humid weather and it is also extremely efficient. You where talking about underground source for heat, so it's quite close. They still need to use their fireplace to heat-up the air but it's already a huge advantage. On another note, in the family house we have in a very humid region (next to the ocean), we have huge problem with heavy humidity building up inside the house and also the walls (the house is quite old and made up of materials that are quite porous. So we bought a dehumidifier to try and remove a lot of that humidity. It's a very heavy bloc the size of a big computer case. For what I understood about it, it's a closed heat-pump (closed AC to be more precise) that cool the air at the entrance to condense water inside a small tank then simply transfer the heat to the output air via another heat exchanger, the air coming out is a bit warmer than ambient air but it works quite well. We need to empty out it's 5 Liter tank of water every 6/7 hours of it working (inside a small room). Hope you find this interesting ! I'm waiting for part 2
@ivoivanov7407
@ivoivanov7407 3 года назад
It seems that water/air and water/water heat pumps will be covered in part 2. Or I hope so.
@richhagenchicago
@richhagenchicago 3 года назад
They have geothermal heat pumps here that work on the same basic principles. You are using the ground via the ground water as a giant heat sink so that your heat pump will not have the problems that my heat pump will have when the outside air is below or near the boiling point of my refrigerant. I have a similar dehumidifier in my basement. It cools the air down which causes some of the water in that air to condense out which is then dumped through a hose to a drain. The air is then run through a counter flow air to air heat exchanger to warm that air and pre-cool the entering air before the exiting air is blown over the condenser coils and released back into the room. This also pre-cools the incoming air before it is blown over the evaporator coils. I am not sure what the efficiency is, but it would heat the air a bit equivalent to its electricity consumption, which, if holding the same amount of moisture, also lowers its relative humidity as well.
@Gulyus
@Gulyus 3 года назад
You can also do exactly that concept with modern heat pumps...you just need to run coils of pipe through the ground to absorb energy from the ground.
@redaceFR
@redaceFR 3 года назад
Whats also interesting is that the heat pump is a two stage heat pump. The first stage is around 30/40 °C to heat up the house and a second stage use the first stage has a heat source to rise the temperature to around 80/90 °C (very hot) for hot tap water (shower, dishes and stuff). If I remember correctly (and I will need to ask for the manual later), it uses the same circuit but cut into 2 sectors with their own pumps to perform the action.
@techyguruman
@techyguruman 3 года назад
That sounds like it's just an open loop ground source heat pump.
@CREGGYAS
@CREGGYAS Год назад
In practical use expect to see “emergency heat” on your thermostat. Using electric coils to supplement the heat pump.
@bgregg55
@bgregg55 Год назад
We converted from electric forced air to mini-split systems in 2016 & have loved everything about them.
@nolankanski9116
@nolankanski9116 3 года назад
I'm liking this refrigeration cycle cinematic universe
@Adam-yr2nq
@Adam-yr2nq 3 года назад
It's very climactic.
@nthgth
@nthgth 3 года назад
@@Adam-yr2nq one might even say climatic
@bracco23
@bracco23 3 года назад
This video feels like the first avengers, bringing all the previous videos together to create a masterpiece.
@ksbrook1430
@ksbrook1430 Год назад
Watching this again. Appreciate the explanation. Enjoyed the bloopers at the end. 😄
@Anotaren
@Anotaren Год назад
Hi! i use heat pumps like these to warm my house here in Sweden during the winters. I have 2 and never had any problems even at -30c, and it's the only thing heating my house. So it works really good!
@balokurd17
@balokurd17 Год назад
Even at -30 ??! Maybe you have low hygrometry because your external unit freezes very fast and it makes a lot of defrost cycle (and waiste electricty of course) I live at high altitude and I only use my heatpump during the afternoon when it's very cold. Then use wood during the night.
@richardstern7158
@richardstern7158 3 года назад
I'm from Australia and at first thought "heat pump" was going to be some amazing new technology, and then you said "reverse cycle air conditioner" and I was like "oh, aren't they standard everywhere? I have 3 in my home." Apparently not. Here they are very common and work great it our climate.
@cgrecommended
@cgrecommended 3 года назад
Mark Taylor wants to tell you about Australia's favourite air
@Thermalions
@Thermalions 3 года назад
Yes, you actually really struggle to buy an airconditioner here that isn't reverse cycle (unless you're buying the smallest cheapest unit possible). And that's in a location where you might turn it to heat mode for a couple of hours on just a few days in the year.
@dog61
@dog61 3 года назад
@Heather Petersen And oil and natural gas.
@georgemaragos2378
@georgemaragos2378 3 года назад
Hi Richard - Sydney dweller here. Yeah i have known reverse cycle air conditioners ( hot and old ) since the 80's basically The old part of the house has a mitsubishi reverse cycle air con from late 80's - still works great The rear part of the house had a LG unit in @1995 but that failed and was replaced 2019 with another mitsubishi The only drawback is you need to remember to change the cycle on the remote from heat to cool 21 heat is was different to 21 cool - so about 2 times a year i remove the batteries for a minute then place them back in and reset it to the correct cycle ( a dot moves between the heat and cool cymbals every 5 seconds , just press the power key on the cycle you want ) Also, if you are in remote or snow / freeze zones you need a higher end model specifically for freezing areas ( like much of north europe / canada ) these machines are more expensive as they have electrical heating element in the outside evaporator to defrost it beore it starts working Regards George
@antonellacanale1719
@antonellacanale1719 2 года назад
Same here in Argentina, we have one in each bedroom and living room and it works great!
@LucasGentry
@LucasGentry 3 года назад
I've said this before, but I can't help but say it again: Every time you post a video, the Internet gets better. Thank you very much for that.
@KiwiMaker
@KiwiMaker Год назад
Cool, In NZ about 90% of houses have heatpumps. I never understood why they needed a defrost cycle until now, Thanks! Id love to experiment with my own ground source heatpump one day too.
@basil5188
@basil5188 3 месяца назад
You have some really wonderful PBS vibes. Thank you for sharing your knowledge! :)
@raydunakin
@raydunakin 3 года назад
I really like the way you explain things.
@kunjupulla
@kunjupulla 3 года назад
#MeToo
@arfyness
@arfyness 3 года назад
And let us easily skip through parts already explained before ;o)
@Akash.Chopra
@Akash.Chopra 3 года назад
@Porky P Iggy I got my heat pump free but now my neighbor is missing his 🤣🤫
@Akash.Chopra
@Akash.Chopra 3 года назад
@Porky P Iggy I would need a wife first 🤣. If you know her, please make the introduction.
@McSlobo
@McSlobo 3 года назад
I really don't. Some graphs, diagrams and animations would actually have been helpful instead of a monologue and images of devices, pipes and hoses.
@VisualBasic6
@VisualBasic6 3 года назад
"We're still talking about refrigeration but I wanted you back for this" >.> Fool me once.
@Zubizubibu
@Zubizubibu 8 месяцев назад
I have never even heard of heat pumps before but this is very educational. Thank you 🙏
@vladnickul
@vladnickul Год назад
I love heat pumps :) we use air to air in the apartament and water-water at the house. even now when the electricity is 3-4 times as much is cheaper then gas. We keep it at 21C to lower further the costs. We insulated the gome and the attic cc with spray on foam the thing cost at least 70% cheaper
@M3T4LGH05T
@M3T4LGH05T Год назад
We use a heat pump as well for our heated flooring as well as our AC unit which can heat or cool using the same water and heat pump as the water cooling unit. Just got to shut the valves for floor hearing in summer so the water only travels to the AC unit.
@DrakeDaraitis
@DrakeDaraitis 3 года назад
I feel like T-Connections is just justifying the cost of each new household product with a video.
@27dcx
@27dcx 3 года назад
RU-vid is a business so anything used for a video can be a write off on taxes
@officer_baitlyn
@officer_baitlyn 3 года назад
@@27dcx not sure how it is in the us, but usually u can write stuff off only partially
@EebstertheGreat
@EebstertheGreat 3 года назад
@@officer_baitlyn You're only supposed to write off whatever fraction is used for business. So for instance, if I use my computer 8 hours a day for work and 4 hours a day for other purposes, I'm only supposed to write off two thirds of its purchase and operating costs. For things like this heat pump, he's probably not supposed to write anything off at all, because he already bought it for another purpose and just had it around and decided to make a video of it. But for something like his Edison phonograph, he could easily write off 100%, since he bought it pretty much exclusively for the video.
@Mengmoshu
@Mengmoshu 3 года назад
I was thinking that it's sort of the other way around. RU-vidring is paying off, so he can buy these gadgets that improve his home, but he's Technology Connections so he sees an opportunity to do a video. And in this case it's a great video.
@theglowcloud2215
@theglowcloud2215 3 года назад
@@EebstertheGreat The tax code in the U.S. is such a garbage fire, however, that people are encouraged to do some creative accounting in order to minimize their taxable income. And I don't blame them.
@jefranke
@jefranke 3 года назад
Since you asked "Why didn't they recommend a heat pump?", my two cents: I used to manage facilities for a restaurant in Minnesota. The heat was provided by the building, and we had constant issues when they temp dropped below 0, which, being in Minnesota, was way too frequent. This was a few years back, mind you, but they had a heat pump that was not rated to the climate, and had no aux heat. According to the HVAC engineer I hired to troubleshoot the issue, this was a common problem with the technology AT THAT TIME. in the early 2000's, the proper control technology was, apparently, prohibitively expensive. My HVAC had been sufficiently "burned" by enough of these (constantly freezing) systems, that he said he would never install or recommend using one in the midwest. Obviously, refrigerants have improved, and the electronics and PLC needed to make these systems run properly have become easily attainable at a low cost.
@andykillsu
@andykillsu 3 года назад
Well that’s your issue. You should never install an air source Heat pump without backup heat... even in the south when the chances of needing the backup heat are very slim, their air handlers still have electric resistance backup heat.
@jsbrads1
@jsbrads1 3 года назад
@@andykillsu The modern heat exchanger still has a shut off temperature and and Minnesota often drops below the shutoff temperature.
@Eidolon1andOnly
@Eidolon1andOnly 3 года назад
Even modern heat pumps aren't good for anything below 10°F and can't out compete a typical gas furnace with 80% efficiency let alone a high efficiency (95-98%) furnace. Heat pumps also require more electricity to run and run longer since at most the air temp leaving the vents is 90° F where as furnace heat comes out at temps that can reach over 135° F. Furnaces have far fewer moving parts and far fewer points of failure, and far more cost efficient in terms of materials and maintenance. A standard heat pump requires at least 3 motors to run, which would be the indoor blower, the outdoor fan, and the compressor, and a furnace at most (high efficiency) only requires the indoor blower and the inducer fan (standard furnaces don't typically have inducer fans). Heat pump efficiency is entirely dependent on outdoor ambient temps so the warmer it is outside, the more efficiency you'll get out of them. A lot of heat pumps also use auxiliary electric heat strips for both comfort and emergency heating and these use a lot of power. I'm an HVAC/R tech and heat pumps are nothing new, and nothing that great, and are definitely not the heating solution of the future. The best solution would be duel fuel systems, which compose both a heat pump and a furnace. This video kinda over sells how great heat pumps really are.
@andykillsu
@andykillsu 3 года назад
@@Eidolon1andOnly if you don’t have a furnace backup heat in area in the north where it can get that cold, you can always use a ground source heat pump.
@caja8468
@caja8468 3 года назад
Well said @@Eidolon1andOnly! This comes across as a commercial for heat pumps and doesn't address how we are going to get the extra power needed from the power grid if a large number of people move to heat pumps. Definitely add more solar + wind but the power grid needs to be able to handle a full load when solar/wind go to zero.
@NormReitzel
@NormReitzel Год назад
Nice explanation. Most peoiple who try to explain refrigeration concentrate from pressure changes (Boyle's law) and ignore the vital phase changes. Good Job!! Also in cooling mode, my unit takes the condensate and evaporates around the condenser, thus recovering the heat of vaporization of the inside humidity. Very Efficient.
@csumme7
@csumme7 Год назад
They are quite common here in Finland. Our apartment has one, they are Nordic models of course. We have wall batteries for those really cold night (-20-30C) but there don't come on very often unless going in and outside.
@Qwarzz
@Qwarzz 3 года назад
It's fun how these always go out of stock in Finland when there's a especially warm summer. We're not used to having air conditioning and these miracle devices gave that as a bonus for lowering heating costs during winter.
@Juhuuu
@Juhuuu 3 года назад
God dammit every time. You'd think people had the foresight to invest in cooling equipment BEFORE the summer but no. It's always at the time of the heatwave. If you couldn't get an air conditioner in the summer, then surely you would buy it in the fall, when they become available again, no? The previous summer isn't going to be the last hot one. They wait until the next summer and the cycle continues. It's a neverending loop.
@Karjis
@Karjis 3 года назад
Same phenomenom as why nobody changes winter tyres before you have snow on the ground 😂
@Qwarzz
@Qwarzz 3 года назад
@@Karjis "Talvi yllätty autoilijat" (Drivers surprised by winter). Every single year.
@markusbjorklund5920
@markusbjorklund5920 3 года назад
I live in a flat connected to a district heating but I also have an air source heat pump to cool the flat and to manage the humidity. It does get hot and moist even here in Finland.
@sunnohh
@sunnohh 3 года назад
@@Juhuuu don’t worry, eventually the ac guys will figure out they should just have crazy high prices all year in your country
@ProTayToeGamer
@ProTayToeGamer 3 года назад
I'm actually in the middle of taking an HVAC class right now and the last few videos you've out out have been invaluable in helping me, thank you so much!
@Worldsoldout
@Worldsoldout 3 года назад
In Switzerland common since the 1980ies. But with water-circuits to heat comfortable and more efficient. And on the top, a lot of them are taking the energy not from the fresh and cold air, they go 200 meters deep in the ground with another water-glycol-circuit. Even more efficient, but not cheap. And now since a few years, this deep in the ground going loops are double used: In winter to get +5°C Water for the heatpump, in summer to bring +16°C Water to cool (without A/C). But it needs good engineering.
@MaksimIzer
@MaksimIzer 3 года назад
facepalm
@Rudenbehr
@Rudenbehr 3 года назад
I wanna do HVAC haha, or be an electrician
@KOTYAR0
@KOTYAR0 3 года назад
I learned air conditioning for 5 years, and I wish we had a troubleshooting rig like that
@KOTYAR0
@KOTYAR0 3 года назад
@@Worldsoldout that's... overwhelming and makes me envious. Well, there are perks living in the 2nd world
@MattH-wg7ou
@MattH-wg7ou 9 месяцев назад
The refrigeration cycle is one of the discoveries/inventions I am most grateful for!
@firestarter12345
@firestarter12345 Год назад
The first part of this video explaining how heat pumps work made me happy, my grandpa put a window a/c unit in my room, it just made my room hotter.
@snowballeffect7812
@snowballeffect7812 3 года назад
I'm hyped for ground-source heat pumps.
@wiredforstereo
@wiredforstereo 3 года назад
We've pretty much moved past them at this point. Air source are so efficient and ground source are so expensive to install, they really don't make sense anymore. In many cases, it's more cost effective to install solar panels to make up the difference. Same with solar water heating. For several years now, it has been more cost effective to install a heatpump water heater and solar panels than a solar water heating system.
@snowballeffect7812
@snowballeffect7812 3 года назад
@@wiredforstereo interesting. I thought maybe ground-source would be more scalable (for larger buildings) and better for extreme climates.
@Basement-Science
@Basement-Science 3 года назад
@@snowballeffect7812 They are better in every way, except initial cost. Mostly because everyone is doing it wrong though. Really, it just depends how long you want to wait until it becomes worth the extra cost.
@xHadesStamps
@xHadesStamps 3 года назад
As in geothermal?
@haroldhenderson2824
@haroldhenderson2824 3 года назад
@@xHadesStamps No, more like trying to "bake" the soil during summer and trying to "freeze" it even colder during the winter. Geothermal uses already hot rocks/soil to provide the heat for electric generation or heating only (no option to reject heat into the rocks/soil).
@MichaelGiacomelli
@MichaelGiacomelli 3 года назад
We got a ground-source heat pump and it's great. There's a foot of snow outside, but the "cold" side of the heat pump is 45 degrees since the ground under our house is pretty warm 100ft down. Efficiency in the summer is insane since the "hot" end of the AC is actually colder than the inside of the house! Edit: if you're interested I'm happy to send pictures.
@captbiptoe
@captbiptoe 3 года назад
Nice to see your local government lets you place something other than a well into the ground.
@rainbowkrampus
@rainbowkrampus 3 года назад
@@captbiptoe Just have to get very creative with the definition of "well" :P
@elzar760
@elzar760 3 года назад
I would love a ground-source heat pump.
@SteveFordham1
@SteveFordham1 3 года назад
Im curious if these ever saturate the ground temperature since you cant "flow fresh dirt" through it like you can flow fresh cold/warm air through the outside portion of an air source heat pump. Does this happen to a certain degree?
@moi01887
@moi01887 3 года назад
Same here! We had one installed in 2012 and it's been great, even in New England winters. One thing I was concerned about was noise, with the compressor being inside the house, as it's in a room right next to our basement media room. But the thing is darn near silent.
@plasmatorchic
@plasmatorchic 9 месяцев назад
It makes me sad it took me so long to realize that this is an application of the joule-thompson effect/coefficient! I'm so glad this channel is here!
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