heat pump vs. gas furnace with woodstove

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rmcfall

Feeling the Heat
Nov 28, 2005
308
We will be installing at least one new stove (model undecided as of yet), as well as a new furnace. We will of course be burning the stove 24/7 as the primary source of heat. With the gas prices being what they are, does a heat pump make sense as a secondary source or heat? I've always had gas furnaces in the past...
 
Just do an ROI analysis. Seems like install cost is key here.
 
ROI analysis??

I know heat pumps are a little more up front than gas furnaces. In the long run, however, it may be worth it...??


Warren said:
Just do an ROI analysis. Seems like install cost is key here.
 
rmcfall, I did not see your location in your profile, and that is important about the heat pump issue. South of the Mason Dixon line is heat pump territory.

To me, I would choose a heat pump over gas, period. I have a new 13.7 Seer pump and it blows warm air in 30 deg weather. If its 0 outside for a couple of days, who cares, let the electric backup kick on if your not around to feed the stove.

The natural gas situation is kinda scary in this country, and Europe for that matter.
 
I live south of the Mason-Dixon line (Charlotte, NC area). I have been using a wood stove as a primary heat source with an electric heat pump as backup. We set the thermostat at 68 and it never comes on. We installed a new heat pump, which is very effecient, and when we do use it, you can actually feel heat coming through the ducts. With the older ones, you could not feel heat.
 
Chesley said:
I live south of the Mason-Dixon line (Charlotte, NC area). I have been using a wood stove as a primary heat source with an electric heat pump as backup. We set the thermostat at 68 and it never comes on. We installed a new heat pump, which is very effecient, and when we do use it, you can actually feel heat coming through the ducts. With the older ones, you could not feel heat.

What are those things costing these days? Ours died a few years ago and I guess I need to replace it here before long.
 
How do heat pumps work exactly? I had central AC installed this past summer and the Trane XL14i compressor said that it can be a heat pump too. The Trane VS air handler is in my attic and is an AC only system. Would I be able to get heat from it somehow?
 
paulgp602 said:
How do heat pumps work exactly? I had central AC installed this past summer and the Trane XL14i compressor said that it can be a heat pump too. The Trane VS air handler is in my attic and is an AC only system. Would I be able to get heat from it somehow?

The A/C just reverses. Instead of collecting heat inside the house and depositing it outside, it collects the heat outside and deposits it in the house.
 
Brother Bart,
We replaced our old unit with a Trane XL 1400 (I think), 2 1/2 ton unit, new heat exchanger, condensing unit and programmable thermostat for $4300.
 
We are south of the Mason Dixon line--in Kentucky. Some have mentioned getting a gas furnace backup to avoid the electric backup. Doesn't sound like you have had any trouble with just the electric backup, however....

Sandor said:
rmcfall, I did not see your location in your profile, and that is important about the heat pump issue. South of the Mason Dixon line is heat pump territory.

To me, I would choose a heat pump over gas, period. I have a new 13.7 Seer pump and it blows warm air in 30 deg weather. If its 0 outside for a couple of days, who cares, let the electric backup kick on if your not around to feed the stove.

The natural gas situation is kinda scary in this country, and Europe for that matter.
 
That is the main complaint I have heard about heat pumps--the feeling of the air being less than warm. From what you say, however, it sounds like this is no longer a problem with the new pumps. Plus, I suppose with a heat pump serving to only supplement wood heat, it is even less of a problem...


Chesley said:
I live south of the Mason-Dixon line (Charlotte, NC area). I have been using a wood stove as a primary heat source with an electric heat pump as backup. We set the thermostat at 68 and it never comes on. We installed a new heat pump, which is very effecient, and when we do use it, you can actually feel heat coming through the ducts. With the older ones, you could not feel heat.
 
rmcfall said:
That is the main complaint I have heard about heat pumps--the feeling of the air being less than warm. From what you say, however, it sounds like this is no longer a problem with the new pumps. Plus, I suppose with a heat pump serving to only supplement wood heat, it is even less of a problem...

That has always been the complaint with heat pumps. Since your skin is 98.6 degrees anything blowing on it that is less than that feels cool. So eighty or nintey degree air out of the heat pump does not feel warm.
 
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