As we get on in years I want to rely less on wood and am considering adding a second minisplit. I am thinking also about a time if one of us or both are here and unable to handle wood. Maine incentives plus tax credits make this addition look attractive. With a moderate income we can get a rebate of 60% up to six thousand dollars on an installation. A problem is I don’t have an ideal place for a second and I don’t know how the possible locations I have would do.
My 15,000 btu Fujitsu heat pump, 18,000 in heat mode, in the livingroom along with the kitchen cookstove keep us comfortable in winter, living in the 900+ sq ft well insulated downstairs of our house. The windows are fairly new and the front of the house is buffered by an enclosed porch. The cook stove is rated at 34,000 btu’s, I believe, and is sufficient to heat us by itself if I feed it well and more often than a larger stove. We also have a 20 year old boiler that is seldom used. That would be our backup in a deep cold snap. Also, whatever shape we are in the stove isn’t going anywhere and an having some wood easily available would be prudent.
Our layout and circulation are pretty good for the single minisplit and heat gets from the livingroom to the kitchen, although it may be a couple of degrees cooler there when running the minisplit alone. Our bedroom and bath stay comfortable enough with the two heat sources in the coldest weather and with the split alone when we run that way. The 36 inch doorways help some there. My wife did use an electric heater to nudge the bedroom temp twice this year. When we rebuilt we insulated between the 1st and 2nd floors and in winter allow very little heat up the stairway. Ideally I would put a second unit in the kitchen dining area but I have no available wall space inside or out. With the cookstove we burned a little less than a cord this warmer year.
I have space to put a second split in the livingroom on the other end of the same wall as the existing one. It would be a little lower on that wall to fit under an exposed beam. The location for the outdoor unit is convenient there doesn’t get roof run off. Another location could be on an interior wall in that same room. That might require chases for the lines, not so attractive to me. A third is in the bedroom. I think that would need to be a smaller unit and getting heat to the rest of the floor may be difficult.
As I write and draw this out it is occurring to me that I would need another 15,000 btu unit to even come close to replacing our use of the stove. While not ideal I’m thinking the living room wall location that would have it blowing either straight toward the kitchen or with fins angled to join the stream of the existing split along the front of the house. That may be my best option. I picture only one unit running most of the time. In colder weather with both going I wonder if managing short cycling would be a problem. Right now our existing minisplit is 8 years old and some redundency would be nice. Running as the backup may add some years to the life of the Fujitsu .
I’m trying to figure if this a workable solution and looking gain some more insight before getting estimates to see if it makes economic sense. The sketch shows our layout and locations where I see a new unit could go.
My 15,000 btu Fujitsu heat pump, 18,000 in heat mode, in the livingroom along with the kitchen cookstove keep us comfortable in winter, living in the 900+ sq ft well insulated downstairs of our house. The windows are fairly new and the front of the house is buffered by an enclosed porch. The cook stove is rated at 34,000 btu’s, I believe, and is sufficient to heat us by itself if I feed it well and more often than a larger stove. We also have a 20 year old boiler that is seldom used. That would be our backup in a deep cold snap. Also, whatever shape we are in the stove isn’t going anywhere and an having some wood easily available would be prudent.
Our layout and circulation are pretty good for the single minisplit and heat gets from the livingroom to the kitchen, although it may be a couple of degrees cooler there when running the minisplit alone. Our bedroom and bath stay comfortable enough with the two heat sources in the coldest weather and with the split alone when we run that way. The 36 inch doorways help some there. My wife did use an electric heater to nudge the bedroom temp twice this year. When we rebuilt we insulated between the 1st and 2nd floors and in winter allow very little heat up the stairway. Ideally I would put a second unit in the kitchen dining area but I have no available wall space inside or out. With the cookstove we burned a little less than a cord this warmer year.
I have space to put a second split in the livingroom on the other end of the same wall as the existing one. It would be a little lower on that wall to fit under an exposed beam. The location for the outdoor unit is convenient there doesn’t get roof run off. Another location could be on an interior wall in that same room. That might require chases for the lines, not so attractive to me. A third is in the bedroom. I think that would need to be a smaller unit and getting heat to the rest of the floor may be difficult.
As I write and draw this out it is occurring to me that I would need another 15,000 btu unit to even come close to replacing our use of the stove. While not ideal I’m thinking the living room wall location that would have it blowing either straight toward the kitchen or with fins angled to join the stream of the existing split along the front of the house. That may be my best option. I picture only one unit running most of the time. In colder weather with both going I wonder if managing short cycling would be a problem. Right now our existing minisplit is 8 years old and some redundency would be nice. Running as the backup may add some years to the life of the Fujitsu .
I’m trying to figure if this a workable solution and looking gain some more insight before getting estimates to see if it makes economic sense. The sketch shows our layout and locations where I see a new unit could go.