Why heaters are the future of cooling

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  • čas přidán 23. 09. 2021
  • A huge number of people still heat their homes with fossil fuels. There’s a better way.
    Subscribe to our channel! goo.gl/0bsAjO
    Experts call it the “cold crunch." As temperatures rise in regions that historically haven’t needed indoor cooling, global demand for air conditioning units is expected to skyrocket. Indoor cooling is already the fastest-growing use of energy in buildings. But the emissions associated with cooling buildings are still tiny compared to the emissions from heating them - and that's because while air conditioning uses electricity, our heat is still largely generated by burning fossil fuels.
    The way we heat our homes and buildings is one of the biggest contributors to climate change. But a solution may actually come from the rush of consumers looking to buy AC for the first time. They're a huge potential market for a different kind of system - the electric heat pump. A heat pump works like a two-way air conditioner, using electricity and a chemical refrigerant to transfer heat either into or out of a building. Instead of using fossil fuels to generate heat, it uses electricity to transfer heat, and it does it efficiently. And if heat pumps are widely adopted, they could make a major impact on the carbon emissions generated by buildings.
    Further reading:
    This report from the International Energy Agency is a great visual look at how the rising demand for space cooling presents buildings with a big opportunity to make their heating systems more efficient:
    www.iea.org/commentaries/is-c...
    Check out Rebecca Leber’s reporting on another big air conditioning challenge - regulating the refrigerants that contribute to global warming:
    www.vox.com/22638093/air-cond...
    And read the Carbon Switch report on heat pumps, which breaks down how much homeowners in each state can save by switching to heat pumps: carbonswitch.co/heat-pump-car...
    Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out www.vox.com.
    Watch our full video catalog: goo.gl/IZONyE
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Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @Vox
    @Vox  Před 2 lety +1166

    Some of you have pointed out that Technology Connections also has a video on electric heat pumps! Alec actually has two, the first of which you can watch here: czcams.com/video/7J52mDjZzto/video.html
    His videos go much more in-depth about how heat pump technology actually works. Our goal was more to explain the connection between two separate climate stories: the booming need for home cooling, and the opportunity that presents to drastically cut our heating emissions. Both stories have a lot more to them than what we could get into in this video, which we hope is just a starting point!

    • @Myself9797
      @Myself9797 Před 2 lety +83

      "So you want a video about heat pumps? Well, through the magic of making two of them..."
      The crossover I never knew I needed, glad to see y'all watch Alec too!! Keep it classy!

    • @fhantom784
      @fhantom784 Před 2 lety +54

      One good point that Alec made is that the additional cost to turn a "one-way" air conditioner into a heat pump is fairly small, and that it'd be a good policy decision to require new air conditioners to also act as heat pumps. Even if they aren't efficient enough on the coldest days and need a backup, they can still be a more efficient way to generate heat for a lot of the year, especially if it comes almost "for free" with your AC.

    • @AmyDentata
      @AmyDentata Před 2 lety +10

      It's a good point that bears repeating!

    • @TathD
      @TathD Před 2 lety +20

      Y'know, if you guys went into a little more detail with your videos, we wouldn't be mad.

    • @TwinnMeisterGeneral
      @TwinnMeisterGeneral Před 2 lety +26

      Glad you guys have pointed people towards Technology Connections for a more in depth look at the science behind them. I appreciate that your video had a different goal, pome people seem to be missing that. May be an idea for future videos to point viewers to other CZcams content for more in-depth look at topics you bring attention to. Either way, always good to have more people know about potential environmental solutions right now

  • @moataz82897
    @moataz82897 Před 2 lety +5794

    Big swing and a miss here by not talking about the efficiency differences between heat pumps vs. traditional furnaces/electric heaters. The reason heat pumps are better is they’re not generating heat, simply moving it from the outside in. That can create efficiencies of up to 500% when compared to traditional heating.

    • @markhaus
      @markhaus Před 2 lety +274

      It goes even further when you have a ground or water source that’s insulated from the ambient temperature and you can put entire towns or districts under one source which scales better than single home ones. The Texas blackout would've been a fraction of what it was if a good portion of them had a heat pump.

    • @Callaghan_212
      @Callaghan_212 Před 2 lety +74

      I was about to comment the same thing, the efficiency of heat pumps is much much higher than traditional solutions (which at best have e coefficient of 1)

    • @__val8571
      @__val8571 Před 2 lety +108

      That's what I thought the video would have been about. Big miss here.

    • @HolgerNestmann
      @HolgerNestmann Před 2 lety +63

      Came here to comment the same thing. Would have made more sense vs political stuff about subsidies and the like. Not everyone with access to the internet is from the US

    • @felixstg1
      @felixstg1 Před 2 lety +122

      As a refrigeration engineer, I was really waiting for the mention of COP (Coefficient Of Performance). As you said, a heat pump can easily reach 400-500% efficiency while a gaz heating reach around 80-85% efficiency.

  • @rjfaber1991
    @rjfaber1991 Před 2 lety +1328

    As a Dutch BIM Engineer specialising in HVAC and plumbing, there has been a grand total of one residential project I've worked on in the past two years that has _not_ featured a heat pump for every apartment. I feel the decision to show the Netherlands as an example of countries that have already embraced the technology is quite correct.

    • @michaelshtutman669
      @michaelshtutman669 Před 2 lety +40

      I've used space heaters for years while having a heat pump, because I assumed it's an air con and meant for cooling therefore should be inefficient as a heater. The lack of public knowledge on the topic is quite a problem

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 2 lety +24

      ​@@michaelshtutman669 Most of the newbuilds I've been involved in haven't had a heat pump as a wall-mounted alternative to an AC unit (ACs are pretty rare here in the Netherlands anyway), but actually as an alternative to the central heating unit, so they provide heat for both the underfloor heating or radiators in each room, as well as hot water from the tap. It's honestly quite impressive that we can do that just by extracting a bit of heat from the ground or the air.

    • @Bbonno
      @Bbonno Před 2 lety +2

      @@rjfaber1991 can systems like that also send cool water to the radiators while still making hot tap water?

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka Před 2 lety +1

      @@Bbonno yes, there are models that can do that, but that seems kind of inefficient...

    • @samuelmiller8261
      @samuelmiller8261 Před 2 lety +6

      Absolutely love dutch urban planning. Class society of forward thinkers.

  • @therealjuralumin3416
    @therealjuralumin3416 Před 2 lety +1510

    As an Australian I was so confused, this is something I've had nearly my whole life (I'm 24) and I have never once heard it called a "heat pump". It's just an air conditioner.

    • @campossanti
      @campossanti Před 2 lety +287

      Same 😂. I was like, maybe it’s me cause English is not my first language. I was waiting for the revolutionary thing until I realised it was just an air conditioner 🤷‍♂️

    • @CT-vm4gf
      @CT-vm4gf Před 2 lety +156

      It’s mostly an American term. We call it reverse cycle air conditioner in Australia.

    • @crazyhayden
      @crazyhayden Před 2 lety +8

      Same!

    • @liamwelsh5565
      @liamwelsh5565 Před 2 lety +16

      It is a very confusing name since it does both.

    • @Kostanikos10
      @Kostanikos10 Před 2 lety +29

      Engineers call it heat pump

  • @Xrey274
    @Xrey274 Před 2 lety +623

    It blows my mind how I just realised, since I'm not a native English speaker, what a heat pump is and that literally every country in Europe has had them for decades.

    • @Xer405
      @Xer405 Před 2 lety +6

      @Steven Strain You can see them everywhere around offices and apartments they're not as popular as traditional means of cooling and heating but we didn't forget about it.

    • @AR-zn7gw
      @AR-zn7gw Před 2 lety

      Your response changes some stuff

    • @rachelobrien4181
      @rachelobrien4181 Před 2 lety +4

      Yep, New Zealand’s been using them for decades too

    • @bahenbihen
      @bahenbihen Před 2 lety +13

      Yepp, I heat my house with 2 units. I never thought of it as something super revolutionary so this video was quite a surprise

    • @danielbienlien4470
      @danielbienlien4470 Před 2 lety +14

      Every southern state in the US has them two. They are normally referred to as mini-splits, not heat pumps, by HVAC techs. This "tech" is nothing new. Its very unlikely that northern climates where temps can reach below 40 will switch to mini-splits when ducted systems keep homes much warmer.

  • @jay-uo2bi
    @jay-uo2bi Před 2 lety +898

    "Revolutionary"
    We have had these for decades in nearly every Australian home.

    • @eustache_dauger
      @eustache_dauger Před 2 lety +81

      They use Apple's definition of "Revolutionary™"
      Pretty much everyone living between the tropic of cancer & tropic of capricorn consider it as an almost necessity if they can afford it and been using it for decades.

    • @SkeleCrafteronYT
      @SkeleCrafteronYT Před 2 lety +173

      Bruh, when I saw him move the camera I was l like. "bro... that's an airconditioner."

    • @xg5zm
      @xg5zm Před 2 lety +22

      Yes I have one in Spain from 10 years ago. They are called split AC units that also can heat. The funy thing I also have water radiators with a gas burning heater. They house was sold with both sistems.

    • @xg5zm
      @xg5zm Před 2 lety +10

      Carefull with the electricity bills if you want to heat and cold your house with these all year around. At lesst in Spain electricity is much more e pensive than gas as per "heat created". Even though the heat pump is much more efficient as a system it is more expensive to feed.

    • @coolGhostVIRUS
      @coolGhostVIRUS Před 2 lety +17

      They confused everything. The first refrigerator built in 1834 was a heat pump. In the video it seems like they try to give it a different meaning.

  • @EngineeringMindset
    @EngineeringMindset Před 2 lety +1975

    Heat pumps don't just heat/cool homes. We have an entire series on the different types and how they work

    • @nhannguyen2190
      @nhannguyen2190 Před 2 lety +50

      please throw in the link

    • @ricky7973
      @ricky7973 Před 2 lety +44

      Nerd

    • @kpopscenario1406
      @kpopscenario1406 Před 2 lety +6

      Nice

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 2 lety +7

      There are high temperature industrial heat pumps that use butane as the working fluid with a COP of 2.2 and can produce 125C to 150C low temperature process steam.

    • @ambroisevalet
      @ambroisevalet Před 2 lety +5

      The engineering mindset is a hundred Times more knoweldgable than vox, don't listen to what they say on Vox

  • @jackgerring6001
    @jackgerring6001 Před 2 lety +409

    I can't believe he called a heat pump 'revolutionary' in 2021.

    • @joshdu9278
      @joshdu9278 Před 2 lety +34

      Revolutionary: involving or causing a complete or dramatic change. It would be revolutionary if everyone buys a heat pump instead of air conditioner

    • @jackgerring6001
      @jackgerring6001 Před 2 lety +19

      @@joshdu9278 that's fair, I just come from somewhere where heatpumps are commonplace so it seemed strange to me

    • @brycelawmaster3746
      @brycelawmaster3746 Před 2 lety +12

      @@joshdu9278 would be even more revolutionary if you knew what you were talking about. A heat pump is an air conditioner but with a reversing valve in it.

    • @ajegs2082
      @ajegs2082 Před 2 lety +9

      @@joshdu9278 Where I live we call "Heat pumps" Air cons, they've been around as long as I can remember, it's not a new technology.

    • @LouisChiaki
      @LouisChiaki Před 2 lety

      Not until you hear and see how noisy the AC system in US are.

  • @matthewrogersmusic
    @matthewrogersmusic Před 2 lety +112

    “With a revolutionary device called a heat pump” nah Vox I’m out after that one 😂

  • @joshuathorson8813
    @joshuathorson8813 Před 2 lety +1535

    This is one of the weakest videos I've seen Vox put out. Graphics don't clearly explain how heat pumps also can work to cool buildings, no explanation of why or how they are more energy efficient.
    I'm very pro-heat pump so it's disappointing to see such a wasted opportunity.

    • @alfinkho
      @alfinkho Před 2 lety +66

      yeah, poor visual and audio quality. I just found this heat-pump thing and don't clearly see the issue they're talking about.

    • @adriancastro5693
      @adriancastro5693 Před 2 lety +114

      I thought it was only me. It was really difficult to understand the main idea behind the need for heat pumps

    • @sammitchell7310
      @sammitchell7310 Před 2 lety +16

      They stole the idea from technology connections

    • @AbdallaElmedny
      @AbdallaElmedny Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah this video was over before it started. Don't feel like I learned much.

    • @ShiraCheshire
      @ShiraCheshire Před 2 lety +22

      It also makes the mistake of talking about air conditioning as something people need in order to feel "comfortable", which is really frustrating. Even places that were previously mild climates are experiencing deadly heatwaves now. People in my own city died this summer due to extreme heat and lack of air conditioning. To talk about air conditioning in terms of "comfort" feels insulting and disrespectful.

  • @XLR84000
    @XLR84000 Před 2 lety +1142

    This has been a thing in every moderately advanced country except the US for literally decades.

    • @GaviLazan
      @GaviLazan Před 2 lety +273

      Right? I was so confused about the "revolutionary new device"... I am literally looking at my "AC unit" that can both heat and cool my apartment.

    • @XLR84000
      @XLR84000 Před 2 lety +286

      @@GaviLazan It amazes me how the US seems so disconnected from the rest of the planet in some areas.

    • @GaviLazan
      @GaviLazan Před 2 lety +151

      @@XLR84000 What is this "national healthcare", "public transit not just in the downtown of major cities", and "more efficient energy policies" you speak of?

    • @vitormachado5274
      @vitormachado5274 Před 2 lety +89

      Here in Brazil literally everyone I know has at least one of those at home, it's interesting to see americans finding it revolutionary xD

    • @ho-ry5uf
      @ho-ry5uf Před 2 lety +59

      I'm from a 3rd world poor country and most people have been using that for sooo long 😅😅

  • @tylermotta2941
    @tylermotta2941 Před rokem +14

    For anyone wondering how a heat pump works in the winter it's all about the refrigerant. So like that ductless mini split in his room uses 410 A refrigerant which boils at -55 F. When refrigerant boils it's going through a phase change and starts pulling energy from it's surroundings to turn into a gas, even if it's like 32 F below it can still draw that heat.

  • @jonyork999
    @jonyork999 Před 2 lety +13

    for those on the fence, I went from a electric baseboard heat at 18 KW in total for my home, to two heat pumps (one each floor) and only consume 6KW in heating now. Same temperature, same comfort, less consumption.

    • @TurtleSauceGaming
      @TurtleSauceGaming Před 8 dny

      Electric baseboard is HORRIBLY inefficient. You can go for oil containing baseboard, which helps, but yes, a heat pump is going to be better. Living in a development with minimal gas presence, a lot of people here are switching to a central heat pump actually, rather than a minisplit. But gas is still far more effective and far cheaper. You can talk about how gas is subsidized, but the end result is it IS cheaper. You can't tell people they need to martyr themselves for climate change. When the government enacts the change, I'll change. Not before. I won't bet on a change that isn't here yet. And meanwhile, your production of electricity is likely gas based anyway. Even LA, located in a prime area for hydro, is only 6.2% hydro. 50% of Los Angele's power is natural gas. Now, if the base is replaced with Nuclear, you can get that down, but California seems firm on powering themselves with hopes and dreams, and not reality. Unfortunately, hopes and dreams don't provide a stable power base. Wind and solar provide a nice bump. But you need a strong basal layer and a function that can act as a rapid change for when demand spikes and drops. Nuclear can only provide basal. Hydro can also respond to demand. But at the moment, there is no foreseeable way to remove fossil fuels from the grid.

  • @chriscunningham158
    @chriscunningham158 Před 2 lety +320

    You guys normally do a great job of explaining the tech or subject up front. However an absurdly low effort was shown here exposing exactly how air conditioners and more importantly heat pumps actually work and their benefits / downsides for both. I barely gathered much from today’s video.

    • @anishvengala
      @anishvengala Před 2 lety +16

      Yeah, I had to search for other videos for heat pumps.

    • @quinton1630
      @quinton1630 Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah. This video felt very tabloid-y. Not a lot of number crunching or science on display.

    • @liuliukiu
      @liuliukiu Před 2 lety +10

      I thought I was the only one 😂 I have no idea what they're trying to say, too much information but not so informative 😂 reading the comments make so much more sense.

    • @matthewferos
      @matthewferos Před rokem +7

      Their diagram showing how they worked is almost completely wrong 🤣

  • @UselessDuckCompany
    @UselessDuckCompany Před 2 lety +3250

    It's interesting to learn about these connections in technology

    • @error200http
      @error200http Před 2 lety +239

      I bet they got inspired by technology connections

    • @TwinnMeisterGeneral
      @TwinnMeisterGeneral Před 2 lety +82

      I feel i need to learn more about heat transfer and refrigerants before i can truly understand the connection here....

    • @Dunnyedd
      @Dunnyedd Před 2 lety +144

      If they made a heat pump dishwasher, how much soap would it use?

    • @Ellie_deMayo
      @Ellie_deMayo Před 2 lety +76

      @@Dunnyedd As much as it says on the box. But only if you also fill the pre-wash basin.

    • @snowstrobe
      @snowstrobe Před 2 lety +49

      I need my automatic toaster...

  • @mattmayo3539
    @mattmayo3539 Před rokem +4

    I stayed in a house in Maui that was built in 1970. Terrible insulation or none at all. But that Fujitsu heat pump had that place at 63 degrees when it was 105 outside. Truly impressive

  • @nickhiscock8948
    @nickhiscock8948 Před 2 lety +46

    This type of reverse cycle air-conditioning has been common in Australia since the 1990s. Alot of places use them from both Heating and Cooling.

    • @xFuaZe
      @xFuaZe Před 2 lety

      The term airconditioner is often used for an air-to-air heatpump.
      We have a water-to-water heatpump and it's more comfortable, more reliable and more efficient.
      Also, it heats our tap water so we don't need natural gas at all.
      So yes, heat pumps are amazing, airconditioners (referring to specifically Air/Air heatpumps) are good and easy to install, but not as amazing.

    • @hugojonsson1013
      @hugojonsson1013 Před 2 lety

      I don't really understand why they made this video saying that this is some new never sen beror technology.
      Im from Sweden and I am becoming a HVAC technician and what they are calling a "heatpump" is what we in Sweden and problaby alot of other countries Call an AC and I have never seen an AC that is only used for cooling.

    • @danielmerkley4543
      @danielmerkley4543 Před rokem

      @@hugojonsson1013 Lol, here in Arizona we only use them for cooling. But I'm sure in Sweden, that is unfathomable to you.

    • @gabfid3
      @gabfid3 Před 11 měsíci

      The reason is not that it is new rather to differentiate from cooling only systems referred to as hvac or ac in the us where gas furnaces are still common for heating.

  • @fredrickfraser1659
    @fredrickfraser1659 Před 2 lety +1237

    *Vox:* “Look at this video we just made!”
    *A certain Midwesterner who likes niche technology and the color brown who made a video about the exact same thing:* “Am I a joke to you”

    • @kyle-silver
      @kyle-silver Před 2 lety +80

      I was really hoping they’d interview him for this!

    • @timothyreeves615
      @timothyreeves615 Před 2 lety +159

      Technology Connections represent!

    • @YetiFell
      @YetiFell Před 2 lety +166

      Next video from Vox is about dishwashers i'm calling it.

    • @shuminyao9750
      @shuminyao9750 Před 2 lety +23

      Can you provide a link of that video? I would love to watch it. Thanks.

    • @GaviLazan
      @GaviLazan Před 2 lety +26

      @@YetiFell Or "What the old toaster teaches us about planned obsolescence"

  • @kanderson5555
    @kanderson5555 Před 2 lety +406

    A "two-way air conditioner" using a heat pump is called a reverse cycle air conditioner because it literally reverses the heat pump the other way when you want to change from hot air flow to cold air flow and vice versa.

    • @ericcarabetta1161
      @ericcarabetta1161 Před 2 lety +2

      So does that mean you are constantly being blown on by warm humid air, like someone breathing down your neck? Who TF would want to put that in their house?

    • @xlopez321
      @xlopez321 Před 2 lety +12

      @@ericcarabetta1161 no

    • @thalescarl1589
      @thalescarl1589 Před 2 lety +13

      @@ericcarabetta1161 no, it is not like that. The only thing that it is reversed it is the cycle of fluid inside the heat exchangers. Therefore, in one case the heat is transferred from the inside of you house to the outside and when the cycle is on reverse, the opposite happens. But the air flow from inside and outside of your house is not mixed.

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 2 lety +1

      @@ericcarabetta1161 it still dries the air even when heating.

    • @t_0246
      @t_0246 Před 2 lety +4

      So its not a heater at all it's just a general air conditioner

  • @svntn
    @svntn Před 2 lety +7

    we got a heat pump installed last winter and we’re loving it so far. we got one because it seemed like the perfect fit for our need, didn’t even know about their positive impact. i hope people start using them more and more.

    • @rociovasquez1947
      @rociovasquez1947 Před rokem

      Where are you located? How your electric bill has being impacted since the change?

  • @gmanengineer
    @gmanengineer Před 2 lety +12

    “Heat Pump” is NOT one of the worst names of all time. It explains exactly what it does: a heat pump moves heat energy from one place to another. Sometimes it’s pumping heat out of your home, sometimes it’s pumping heat into your home.

    • @Digital111
      @Digital111 Před rokem +3

      For the average consumer it is a bad name and companies know this, that's why they spend so much money on marketing.

  • @katyoutnabout5943
    @katyoutnabout5943 Před 2 lety +521

    Again, Vox needs to do just a little more research on what other countries are doing, and how other countries cope with temperature extremes.

    • @nehankaranch2149
      @nehankaranch2149 Před 2 lety +33

      Vox isn't about research, and the people who watch vox have one mindset. : usa worst country in the world

    • @Fireclaws10
      @Fireclaws10 Před 2 lety +110

      @@nehankaranch2149 the US is very behind in most factors in the developed world.

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Před 2 lety +8

      @@nehankaranch2149 Well about 91% of Vox viewers are from US.
      And I can guarantee that almost 100% would be from the West.
      ( I include Australia,NZ ) in that toom

    • @parvchetri0995
      @parvchetri0995 Před 2 lety +5

      Here in my country the usual sunny day temperature is like 35 degree celcius and we are used it. I am the kind of guy who can withstand heat so we are pretty okay with normal fans, in fact only my dad uses it very much. After hearing that roads melted in UK when temperature reached 32 degree celcius, I was hella shocked. How can the average temperature of a day in my country melt roads in the other? Most people in my country are known to withstand heat, though heat waves heat my country's capital upto 50 degrees, which happens every year, or atleast 45 degrees.
      By the way by all the temperature degrees I mentioned I use the Celcius system.

    • @parvchetri0995
      @parvchetri0995 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thebestevertherewas Yeah but go to any video on the middle east made by them and the comments would be full of anti-US dudes.

  • @AlMurtaqa
    @AlMurtaqa Před 2 lety +225

    Here comes Technology Connections...

    • @amanda3050
      @amanda3050 Před 2 lety +3

      He'll be so happy!

    • @Rafeno760
      @Rafeno760 Před 2 lety +7

      happy to see this comment. I love that guy

    • @ermytanio7111
      @ermytanio7111 Před 2 lety +1

      IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!

    • @mr.randomgamer888
      @mr.randomgamer888 Před 2 lety +5

      Time to explain the heat cycle :D

    • @GaviLazan
      @GaviLazan Před 2 lety +11

      @@amanda3050 Though he'll probably be flabbergasted at the "revolutionary" tag Vox gave them. Like, they've been around for years and most countries already use them.

  • @mikelouis1991
    @mikelouis1991 Před 2 lety +10

    As an HVAC technician I can definitely tell you heat pumps are super in efficient in northern climates

  • @Wonderhussy
    @Wonderhussy Před 2 lety +65

    I just had these installed at my house in Death Valley, where it gets to be over 120°F in the summertime...curious to see how this coming season goes in terms of comfort -- and electric bills!

    • @meercreate
      @meercreate Před 2 lety +5

      Yooo wonderhussy what a pleasant surprise. Yeah solar would be a great idea to offset consumption and provide backup power if the power goes out in the area.

    • @shaymcquaid
      @shaymcquaid Před 2 lety +1

      Funny to randomly run into you Wonderhussy!! /../,

    • @DaLULZ8
      @DaLULZ8 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't think you need a heat pump in death valley

    • @Wonderhussy
      @Wonderhussy Před 2 lety +1

      @@DaLULZ8 you'd be surprised, it gets very chilly there in the winter

    • @kobalt9299
      @kobalt9299 Před rokem +2

      In every single house in the middle east there is this "heat pump " that you call , it's just an ordinary air conditioner why call it a heat pump. Noting that you don't need to warm your room in the winter in the middle east but everyone has this "heat pump" and everyone uses it in australia , India , Asia, Northern Africa so I'm so surprised that Americans are just realising that there is something called a "heat pump" (it's just an air conditioner)

  • @courage936
    @courage936 Před 2 lety +169

    A heat pump is basically what we call an A.C? I don't get what is the new idea here.

    • @aaronhogg1528
      @aaronhogg1528 Před 2 lety +24

      During summer months, yes it is just a common AC. The real difference is in the winter months when the unit swaps out and is transferring heat from outside air to bring inside instead of needing a furnace to heat the house. This is I think what they were trying to get at, but may have did an inadequate job of since it was a climate piece and not a natural resources piece.
      We have a heat pump and live in a climate where in the winter time it gets below 0 (both *F & *C) and when it does, the heat pump takes a back seat to our electric furnace. It is also a weird sensation as the house will be warm, but the air from the register is at best luke warm in the winter. We have gotten used to it, but I can see a lot of HVAC techs needing to explain that the air will never be hot because you are trying to warm the house with cold outside air.

    • @jmack619
      @jmack619 Před 2 lety +33

      A heat pump is reversible. You can pump the heat to outside ..air conditioning, or pump the heat indoors .. heating. We have them for 30 to 40 years in canada

    • @Drknow1984
      @Drknow1984 Před 2 lety +27

      @@realneonbluegamer No, a large portion of them are one way. A lot of new models have features that work like a heat pump, but many people aren't using new models.

    • @KeeperOfTheSevenKeys.
      @KeeperOfTheSevenKeys. Před 2 lety +11

      The new idea is that it's an A.C. that works in reverse. It's not really "new" though, they just haven't become mainstream despite being better because everyone already has a furnace. They aren't rare though, a lot of people do have them.

    • @gerwin5492
      @gerwin5492 Před 2 lety +10

      What's shown in the video are mainly air-air heatpumps. They have a maximum efficiency of 300%. Water-air or water-water heatpumps is where it's at, with efficiencies of 400-600% (COP). Those heatpumps are connected to ground(water) springs where more heat can be extracted in winter and stored in summer. The heatpump is connected to your central heating system, providing low-temperature heating. Ofcourse houses need to be ready for low-temperature heating with sufficiënt insultation and efficiënt floor-heating. It's currently the most common way of heating for new buildings in the Netherlands (shown in the video), as we're moving away from natural gas.

  • @ilovecomputers
    @ilovecomputers Před 2 lety +61

    Technology Connections fans were ready to shout “heat pump” at the start of this vid lol

  • @jakethesnake3513
    @jakethesnake3513 Před 2 lety +3

    Im honestly surprised people didnt know about this, I live in Sweden and we have used one since like 2010 or something like that.
    We have only had to fix it once during those 11 years, although we dont use it often as we heat our home in other ways aswell, cooling system works perfectly btw

  • @mygetawayart
    @mygetawayart Před 2 lety +4

    Didn't realize they were so important for the climate. I've had them in my home since we moved and we also have solar panels for electricity and water heating.

  • @BigBoiiLeem
    @BigBoiiLeem Před 2 lety +185

    It still surprises me that heat pumps are so rare in the US. In New Zealand, and other Commonwealth Countries, we call the AC/Heat Pump combo the AC, and we just assume that you get one with the other. Then I heard that in the US, where AC is really common, but heat pumps aren't, and it made no sense to me at all, considering you already had the mechanics installed to make it possible.

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety +11

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

    • @BigBoiiLeem
      @BigBoiiLeem Před 2 lety +15

      @@Chad.Commenter I didn't make the video my dude

    • @straightasarainbow5344
      @straightasarainbow5344 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Chad.Commenter an ac is a heat pump, can either pump heat out in order to cool or pump it in to warm. It's much more efficient at heating than directly heating via heating element or natural gas. If you're interested, there is a video by the channel "technology connections" that does a much better job of explaining.

    • @BlunderDownUnder
      @BlunderDownUnder Před 2 lety +7

      @@straightasarainbow5344 It's more that most installed AC in the US doesn't have the ability to reverse the direction of the regigerant - ie the condenser becomes the evaporator and the evaporator becomes the condenser.

    • @Mrkevi123
      @Mrkevi123 Před 2 lety +12

      We could do that in the USA, but that would make TOO much sense.

  • @DaKooler
    @DaKooler Před 2 lety +428

    Maybe take a look at how Denmark is heating their houses. Something called “fjernvarme”. It is really effective, and around 80 or so percent of homes in Denmark use it. It’s sort of the same as electrical stations, that have several houses connected, but for heat, and the smart thing is, that big buildings that produce a lot of heat, like a server farm, can Connect to the grid and use their heat to heat up houses.

    • @glisade2789
      @glisade2789 Před 2 lety +16

      Listen, i googled your word and its not just Denmark. All over Russia is using it.

    • @braincell4536
      @braincell4536 Před 2 lety +46

      its called district heating

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety +14

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

    • @chantaldesiree1393
      @chantaldesiree1393 Před 2 lety +10

      @@braincell4536 Yes or if you want a literal translation it's long-distance heating. It exists in many countries not only in Denmark.

    • @maxsimes
      @maxsimes Před 2 lety +3

      In germany its called fernwärme :)

  • @aprilialover125
    @aprilialover125 Před 2 lety +5

    I think you guys kinda missed telling everyone how incredibly efficient these things are. They are almost 4-5 times times as efficient as regular electric heaters. Saying that if you put in 1000W it will give you 3-5000W of heating power back, because of how it takes the heat from the outside air and "pumps" it to the inside

    • @1337Jogi
      @1337Jogi Před 2 lety

      The problem is really that the 4-5 times factor only works out in relatively mild climates.
      The efficiency for heating goes way down if it is really cold outside to the degree that it will use only maybe half the energy compared to an electric heater or it will stop working completely.
      If the electric power comes from natural sources such as gas this combines the overall efficiency to be less than heating directly with gas.
      That is of course since the transformation of gas to electric power only comes with a 30-40% efficiency. So you end up with 2 x 30% = 60% or if it is so cold that the heat pump stops working you end up with only 30% (backup electric heating)
      In most countries this will not be the case for alot of days in the winter but that depends onf where you live.
      Combine this with a really high upfront installation cost and cheap gas prizes, high electric energy prizes and you see why it is not common yet in europe for example.

  • @fmixthings
    @fmixthings Před 2 lety

    I live north of Seattle and was so happy to have ductless heat pumps in my house during the heat wave. Our first year in this house I was told by the propane guy it might last a month during winter and at $450 to refill, I wasn't going to spend that on heating. I almost exclusively used my wood stove. The next year we got heat pumps installed. They are the way to go.

  • @daniloatanazio1678
    @daniloatanazio1678 Před 2 lety +153

    we use this type of AC for decades here in Brazil, in my house I have 3 units and I'm going to buy one more, and this AC it's so much common, like almost every store and middle class family has one of those

    • @andre-cmyk
      @andre-cmyk Před 2 lety +7

      pera então eh literalmente só um ar condicionado padrão que a gente usa?

    • @nehankaranch2149
      @nehankaranch2149 Před 2 lety +7

      @@andre-cmyk no this is a different one but people are really ignorant and just look at the shape and say that it is

    • @daniloatanazio1678
      @daniloatanazio1678 Před 2 lety +9

      @@andre-cmyk sim, é que nos EUA eles usam ar-condicionado central a gás, tu mexe no termostato e escolhe a temperatura, mas no resto do mundo é ar-condicionado elétrico que nem esse que aparece no vídeo, que sinceramente é muito melhor e bem mais simples de usar no

    • @tropicalverktaki
      @tropicalverktaki Před 2 lety +15

      pois é, eu esperando apresentarem algo super revolucionário, e os caras mostram o ar condicionado que eu tenho em casa. me senti super ecologicamente correto agora hahaha

    • @grumpybulldog19
      @grumpybulldog19 Před 2 lety +3

      Acho q bomba de calor são os AC do tipo inverter, não tenho certeza

  • @kyechun7540
    @kyechun7540 Před 2 lety +198

    Heat Pumps have been the norm here in Aotearoa New Zealand for 15-20 years now. They definitely have benefits over traditional heaters - but you need to point out that they’re pretty inefficient if your home isn’t well insulated. Wall insulation and double glazing work to keep the warm or cold air in and dramatically reduce the energy required by the Heat Pump to be effective. So yes while it’s great other places are catching up, being aware of the best situations for them is the best way to address climate and energy concerns.

    • @Mateus_Coutoo
      @Mateus_Coutoo Před 2 lety +4

      The heat pump can be ineffective if the insulation is bad, but it will always be more efficient than burning fossil fuel

    • @owennilens8892
      @owennilens8892 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Mateus_Coutoo a properly isolated traditionally heated place can easily be more efficient than a badly isolated heat pumped place.
      OP is not exhagerating. Double glazing and properly isolating your roof can especially make a huge difference!

    • @TheBlobik
      @TheBlobik Před 2 lety +5

      I am not sure what "double glazing" means - is it just that window has two layers of glass? Cause if thats it, its nothing new. Heck, the windows in my vintage apartment that are 100 years old have two layers of glass (but in this case they are basically double windows - you open one, and there is second behind it). And the two glass sheets integrated in one frame has beed the standard here for decades, I would say that probably since 1950's. Nowadays the optimal cost/performance window will have 3 sheets of glass, and if you really want to have extreme heat efficiency without regard for the cost, you can get a window with 4 layers of glass. Are there really places in the world, where a window just has one layer of glass and thats it? Sounds very XIX century...

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před 2 lety +3

      @@owennilens8892 If the point is to first make sure there is good insulation, then you're right.

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety +1

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

  • @djhaloeight
    @djhaloeight Před 2 lety

    My job just had mini split units installed in all of the control pulpits for the machines we run. We used to have window A/C units with standard electric heaters built in, and they had to be replaced every 2 years or so. We’ve got big mini split inverters now that also do heat. Basically heat pumps. Interested to see how they work in the cold months. The AC so far has been amazing.

  • @pe4153
    @pe4153 Před 2 lety +4

    1:48 "Heat pump" is a more accurate name for any air conditioner. Whether you cool/heat depends on where you are "pumping" the heat

    • @xFuaZe
      @xFuaZe Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly, either pumping heat energy in or out of your house.
      Moving heat is more efficient than using an heating element (and also allows for cooling).
      The difference between 'heat pump' and 'a/c' is that it doesn't have to be a conventional airconditioner, but instead if you source heat from ground (water) into the floor/radiators (water) it's more efficient and much more comfortable.

  • @faramhit1326
    @faramhit1326 Před 2 lety +107

    The first map looks odd. Shows Buenos Aires as cooling free, when temperatures during summer normally exceed 35C up to 40.

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Před 2 lety +6

      It's all relative ig.
      In countries like India, we have temperatures in winters upto 35°C.
      And in Summers upto 49°C on average.
      Here a 35-36° is considered a very pleasant temperature.

    • @AmandaComeauCreates
      @AmandaComeauCreates Před 2 lety +2

      The map shows places with heating and cooling. Does Buenos Aires require heating systems?

    • @faramhit1326
      @faramhit1326 Před 2 lety +5

      @@AmandaComeauCreates Absolutely. Ive never been to a house without AC in Buenos Aires, its unbearable during summer

    • @faramhit1326
      @faramhit1326 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thebestevertherewas Sure. I just wanted to point out that Buenos aires does require AC, specially because of the combination of high temperatures and humidity

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Před 2 lety +1

      @@faramhit1326 yeah I agree.
      Absolute Temperatures don't account for Humidity.
      When you can't sweat to cool off, it feels much hotter than it is.

  • @BuildinWings
    @BuildinWings Před 2 lety +32

    Heat pumps have been a thing in the US for a while, you see them in office buildings and apartment complexes pretty frequently.

    • @newleaksman
      @newleaksman Před 2 lety +1

      i watched the video and was wondering if it was maybe only in my state.

    • @daveubermensch
      @daveubermensch Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly. It's as if someone with little knowledge on the subject or it's history just learned it exists, decided this was a new thing about to be big, and made a video.

  • @bensleight2398
    @bensleight2398 Před 2 lety +6

    I’m in the US and have a “split unit AC” that can both heat and cool. I already have a heat pump then, correct?

    • @AnalogueKid2112
      @AnalogueKid2112 Před 2 lety +1

      If you don’t have gas/propane/oil that you’re paying for, then probably. Some homes have baseboard electric heat though, which gets expensive fast

    • @rubidot
      @rubidot Před 2 lety

      Yes, you have a heat pump.

  • @flaviusfake271
    @flaviusfake271 Před 2 lety

    I can tell you we have lots of heat pumps in New Brunswick Canada. We had several weeks in the 95f to 110f (or 35c to 42c). In the winter, some days will be often be colder than -35f or -35c so we still require an alternative heating source for some days but that is only for about 1 month at the most in the year.

  • @thetrison
    @thetrison Před 2 lety +48

    It's interesting how different people call it. We Vietnamese call it the "cooling machine" in our language and we learned to call it "air conditioner" in English classes. Then, going to the West, I've only heard people calling it the "heat pump." So confusing...

    • @jmack619
      @jmack619 Před 2 lety +15

      An air conditioner is, cooling only. A heat pump reverses its piping with a reversing valve, and gives you heating

    • @geekypreacher
      @geekypreacher Před 2 lety +3

      Viet here, I thought about the same thing when I was young. After working in the industry for awhile, you can classify them like so: heat pump (has reversing valve that transfer the hot gas in or outdoor to extract or remove heat; air condition - cool only. In addition, in the trade we have evaporative cooling (water), cooler, chiller to achieve different aspect of air conditioning.

    • @Sayntavian
      @Sayntavian Před 2 lety +5

      Hey man, if you come to Australia, it's an air conditioner (edit: a 'reverse cycle air con', as in it can also heat). I guess if you go to a country that's generally cold, it might be called a heat pump. I know an english guy who still calls it a heat pump.

    • @geekypreacher
      @geekypreacher Před 2 lety +1

      @@Sayntavian yes i agree it should be called air conditioner too.

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety +2

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

  • @elgreco75
    @elgreco75 Před 2 lety +34

    I would not call a Heat Pump revolutionary, they have been around for decades.

    • @TwoPlusTwoEqualsFive32
      @TwoPlusTwoEqualsFive32 Před 2 lety +16

      Let the Americans think they are on to something new, it makes them feel better.

    • @joshdu9278
      @joshdu9278 Před 2 lety

      @@TwoPlusTwoEqualsFive32 I didn't know about heat pumps to be honest.

    • @Arcaz96
      @Arcaz96 Před 2 lety +3

      Here in the Philippines we have them since I was child. I am now 25.

    • @choqlit
      @choqlit Před 2 lety +1

      @@TwoPlusTwoEqualsFive32 I live in America and our house has had a heat pump since 1982. I think it's the northeastern US that is behind and still using heating oil

    • @thoop6795
      @thoop6795 Před 2 lety

      Im not sure if you did, but op deleted my comment calling him out lol

  • @luddity
    @luddity Před 2 lety +1

    Here in coastal BC, Canada, folks this past summer started buying air conditioners at a truly unprecedented rate. Air conditioners were never a thing here until recently. Lots of elderly people died of heatstroke, and a few died in forest fires that ate small towns.

  • @mehwishkhan9671
    @mehwishkhan9671 Před 2 lety +8

    I live in the US and every house in my neighborhood, built in the 1970’s, has these. A lot of older homes do rely on gas powered heating as well as some newer ones who want to keep electric bills low and just love the aesthetic of the gas stove. However, the pump is definitely very common here. I would add though, that even with the benefits of having this type of cooling over gas methods, having ceiling fans throughout your home makes a huge difference. If you can keep air circulation wherever you happen to be, your need for very low temp settings is greatly reduced and ceiling fans take waaaay less energy to run.

  • @cocojamonica
    @cocojamonica Před 2 lety +30

    They have these everywhere in New Zealand (used mainly for heating) and in the Philippines (for cooling). They're amazing

    • @cat2556
      @cat2556 Před 2 lety

      They have heat pumps for cooling….. you mean an AC?

    • @gasdive
      @gasdive Před 2 lety

      @@cat2556 tomato tomato

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

    • @worldchangingvideos6253
      @worldchangingvideos6253 Před 2 lety

      @@Chad.Commenter Wrong, 4x leverage of ambient heat for free

    • @worldchangingvideos6253
      @worldchangingvideos6253 Před 2 lety

      @@Chad.Commenter Wrong, 4x leverage of ambient heat for free

  • @dyuman3983
    @dyuman3983 Před 2 lety +127

    Ah I bet they were “inspired” by technology connections” here. For the uninitiated, Technology Connections in a kickass CZcams channel.

    • @thumper5555
      @thumper5555 Před 2 lety +4

      LUV IT

    • @jc6226
      @jc6226 Před 2 lety +2

      Why were they inspired by that channel? I agree it's a good channel, but heat pumps are 200 years old. Also, whatever they were inspired by, this is a much crappier video than Vox usually puts out.

  • @gyommr
    @gyommr Před 2 lety +6

    Air conditioning is a non-negotiable in Australia! 🥵 Usually people have the split-system aircon for both heating and cooling since city temperatures range from 0° to 45°C 😂

  • @ReidGameX
    @ReidGameX Před 2 lety

    Hi. I’m from Maine. We’ve been using heat pumps around here for YEARS. I remember hearing about them at least 15 years ago. They’re everywhere.

  • @Thebreakdownshow1
    @Thebreakdownshow1 Před 2 lety +16

    As a cheer building engineer located in Canada I can guarantee swapping furnaces in Canada is hard to do with heat pumps. Especially in places where you have a lot of days below freezing point. But a lot of the world can adopt it.

    • @alexviau6950
      @alexviau6950 Před 2 lety +3

      Heat pumps can still extract heat from the air below 0 degrees. Mine can still heat my home at -20 C. Some can heat at -27C. Water freezing doesn't mean there is no heat that can be extracted from the air.

    • @Thebreakdownshow1
      @Thebreakdownshow1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexviau6950 one of my
      Building we had one and on -27 days or below we would struggle. The way we fixed it is by not removing boilers in the building and use them to supplement as cost was not an issue being environmentally cautious was the priority. I have worked with other clients where budget is tight it’s hard to recommend both a boiler and heat
      Pump.

    • @TheBlobik
      @TheBlobik Před 2 lety +3

      @@Thebreakdownshow1 well for tougher climates you just need the heat pump that uses other source of heat than external air. Like the ground source - not so deep underground you can expect pretty stable +4C even in harsh winters. This is sometimes called as 'shallow geothermal' energy.

    • @Thebreakdownshow1
      @Thebreakdownshow1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheBlobik I agree there are options it's the added cost that makes it harder in certain applications.

    • @SGTxBlack
      @SGTxBlack Před 2 lety

      @@Thebreakdownshow1 bro all you need is a 98% gas furnace with an evap coil and heat pump, set temperature parameters to say -5 and thus locking out the heat pump and using gas furnace only

  • @SkywalkerWroc
    @SkywalkerWroc Před 2 lety +120

    Aircon serviceman is the job of the future.
    Expect a huge under-supply in the specialists.
    BTW: Greetings from Europe, where heat pumps are popular. So weird to see Americans discover them just now, lol.

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 2 lety +3

      In Austraila, and am a fan of Heat pumps also... even at the 2500-5000AUD price.

    • @PedroSanchez-zv1lr
      @PedroSanchez-zv1lr Před 2 lety

      If will be cheaper buy a new one than pay for a person to fix an old high consume air conditioner

    • @DonHrvato
      @DonHrvato Před 2 lety

      It has much to do with policy

    • @jjandrooney
      @jjandrooney Před 2 lety

      like the metric system?

    • @KillerB1995
      @KillerB1995 Před 2 lety +7

      I do HVAC in USA. Heat Pumps been around for years now. Most popular unit we sell. Heat pumps don't heat near as good as Gas or Wood though. When the temperature drops below 32 it pulls very little heat out of the air to warm your house. Not very effective when super cold

  • @erikl85
    @erikl85 Před rokem

    Just replaced my 30 year old heat pump with a newer model, absolutely love it. Most heat pumps have electric coils in the air handler as backup for those super cold days and to preheat the air, also for emergency heat should your compressor or condenser go out.

  • @LeVisnLoVe
    @LeVisnLoVe Před 2 lety

    I've done my part to replace every non-heat pump condenser unit with heat pump units at every senior living and apartment communities I have worked for the last 5 years. I am shock that this is just now coming to light after my 12 years of knowing about them. As long as you have two stage heating (use of electric coils) your golden.

  • @erilidon1
    @erilidon1 Před 2 lety +40

    Just to be clear, we do have them in the US. My home, my parents, my in-laws all have heat pumps... nothing new. I too was like "ummm?!" We just colloquially refer to it as "AC", maybe that's some of the confusion by the author of this video.

    • @terichewbaccazulu5908
      @terichewbaccazulu5908 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm in the US (New England area) and my apartment only got a heat pump maybe 6 years ago? We only learned about it because my town was pushing for a bulk discount. I'm sure it depends on where you live as to whether or not it's popular. (PS. it was advertised as a "heat pump".)

    • @erilidon1
      @erilidon1 Před 2 lety +4

      @@terichewbaccazulu5908 Perhaps, I am in the Southeastern US, maybe they are just more popular/common here. My house was built in 1989 and when we moved in (2008) we replaced the existing heatpump system as it hadn't been properly maintained and was having issues. The one we replaced was original to the house in '89.
      They are definitely marketed as "heat pumps" but everyone I know just calls it "AC" or just "the air". Like we just switched it over to heating mode and I asked my wife this morning, "Did you ever hear the air come on last night".

    • @terichewbaccazulu5908
      @terichewbaccazulu5908 Před 2 lety +1

      @@erilidon1 "the air" - I like that :)
      And the place I live in was most likely built around 1910 so... a lot of updates need to be made.

    • @MoonLiteNite
      @MoonLiteNite Před 2 lety +2

      They are popular in areas in USA where it gets kinda cold, but not too cold. And you need the cooling air as well.
      If it gets too cold, heat pumps just don't work.
      And if you live in a hot place that never gets cold, why have a pricey heat pump? Just get a one way heat pump (a normal AC) and save yourself tons of money.

    • @erilidon1
      @erilidon1 Před 2 lety

      @@MoonLiteNite Makes sense... and as a side note, when we purchased we made sure the house was all electric because the prices seem to be more stable, plus in hindsight, it's "greener" all that has to happen is the utility switch to clean energy and I'm automatically green, and they are slowly working on it, in my area at least. No more coal burning and they are phasing out natural gas for solar/nuclear.
      But some houses still have gas (propane) heating as a backup, we have a (wood burning) fireplace that we've used twice when we've lost power in winter but other than that its comfortable in the summer and winter no issues.
      Right now it's in heating mode but has yet to switch on as we have quite good insulation and new windows.

  • @Charmedone9805
    @Charmedone9805 Před 2 lety

    i just moved into an apartment that has one of these. They are amazing!. im still waiting for the summer though to see how cool they keep the rooms but im sure it works just as well as a window ac

  • @SD-tj5dh
    @SD-tj5dh Před 2 lety

    The great thing about heat pumps is there will always be places where heat is needed through the summer. If you have a water heater, clothes drier or a swimming pool, the heat you draw out from your house can go to those places instead.
    In the winter you can draw heat from your fridge/freezers instead of having the rear element heating a small section of wall in your kitchen. Store heat from an oven when it's no longer in use etc etc.
    If you have a robust enough system, you can move around your temperature differences to wherever you need them most around your home before you need to throw it in the ground or into the atmosphere.
    I always imagine how it could be utilised in leisure centres, where a closed loop system could be used to draw heat out of a gymnasium using air-conditioning and the excess heat being used to supplement the heating of the leisure pool or spa area.

  • @RedwoodGeorge
    @RedwoodGeorge Před 2 lety +4

    I installed a small heat pump in my office in the summer of 2020, anticipating work-from-home to continue for quite a while. It allowed me to ditch the room heater (an electric oil-filled radiator, somewhat efficient since al the heat was generated directly in the room) and I didn't need to buy a window air conditioner. What's not mentioned here is just how quiet these are in operation - it's not like a cheap motel air conditioner that's rattling on in the background for hours on end but instead there's a whisper quiet fan blowing cold (or warm) air into the room with minimal fuss.
    The other issue touched on is efficiency - the SEER rating of a heat pump can be 18 with some units well above 20. Window air conditioners can have SEER ratings as low as 10 for the cheap ones to 15+ for the better units.

  • @harshvemuri4241
    @harshvemuri4241 Před 2 lety +27

    Wait, this is about the ACs that both heat and cool a room right??

    • @jmack619
      @jmack619 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, they reverse for heating

    • @MoonLiteNite
      @MoonLiteNite Před 2 lety

      It is just like any other AC you see, but has like 3 valves that flip the freon (or whatever brand name) around.
      Very old tech, just has more moving parts and is not practical in most areas in USA
      Either it is too cold to use in the winter; or you don't get a winter and you don't need the heating aspect of it.

    • @LtZetarn
      @LtZetarn Před 2 lety +1

      Many house in US still using gas or oil to heating a house instead of A.C. unit that can do both way and using pure electric.
      Those heating method created emission at each household unlike the electric than can use electricity from green source like wind or solar.

    • @jmack619
      @jmack619 Před 2 lety

      @@LtZetarn green energy can,t do everything ! It supplies less than 10 % of total demand. Check out Mikey Moore documentary on green power.

    • @worldchangingvideos6253
      @worldchangingvideos6253 Před 2 lety

      @@MoonLiteNite you're very wrong

  • @redMaple_QC
    @redMaple_QC Před rokem

    My parents had a heat pump in the early 80s. It warms and cool. Moving to the U.S. I was amazed that heat pumps are not the known here. Also, for those with basements, you could pump the cool air from the basement to the upper levels with a simple little fan.

  • @tyrannicpuppy
    @tyrannicpuppy Před 2 lety +1

    Here in Australia (well, Victoria at least) we call them Reverse Cycle Air Conditioners.
    Indicating that if you reverse the cycle, they make you warm instead of cold.

  • @telljuliet1
    @telljuliet1 Před 2 lety +67

    Fun fact: heat pumps are some of the rare things that are 200% or more efficient. Ie it does 2x+ more heating/cooling energy transfer than the electricity consumed by the unit.

    • @thomasstambaugh5181
      @thomasstambaugh5181 Před 2 lety +3

      Another fun fact: It is overall system efficiency that matters. The comparison that counts is the quantity of heat delivered to the target living area for each kilowatt-hour of electricity consumed. A portable oil-filled electric space heater (no fan) or -- for that matter -- conventional electric baseboard radiator -- is 100% efficient. That means that every kilowatt-hour of electricity is converted to 3,412.14 BTUs of heat -- or, if you prefer, 3,600 kilojoules.
      It isn't possible to be more efficient than that.

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 Před 2 lety +7

      @@thomasstambaugh5181 Actually yes you can with a heat pump for one simple reason you are not using the electricity to generate the heat, but instead merely using it to move the heat that already exists. You still need to use some energy to work against the entropy gradient like this but it is less than is needed to generate the same amount of heat. Thus how the COP is greater than 1 typically around 4-5 that is to say that while 1 kilowatt hour can only generate around 3,600 kilojoules it can be used to move 14,400-18,000 kilojoules of the heat already present outside into the living space. And yes even what we think of as cold air still has a lot of heat as even during cold conditions earths surface temperatures are relatively warm remember 0 C is already 273 K in absolute terms so there is still a lot of energy to play with there.

    • @thomasstambaugh5181
      @thomasstambaugh5181 Před 2 lety +1

      @@seraphina985 : Sorry, but I fear you miss the point. The COP of the heat pump is not the same as overall efficiency of the system that delivers that heat. In a split-cycle system like we're discussing, the heat pump is NOT moving heat "already present outside into the living space". It is instead moving it from the heatpump into a heat exchanger located in the same outside enclosure as the heatpump itself, where the heat is transferred to the transfer fluid. More heat is lost through the wall of the flexible lines that connect the exterior inverter to the wall unit. Another heat exchanger in the wall unit has to then transfer the heat to the room air. NONE of those components is 100% efficent.
      As a thought experiment, consider a system that had no wall unit connected to it, and that merely circulated the transfer fluid in a large loop. That system would still have a COP of 400% at the heat pump -- and would deliver ZERO useful space heat.
      The metric that matters is the energy delivered to the interior heating space divided by the total energy consumed by the system (and measured at the meter). That metric cannot be greater than 100%.

    • @gasdive
      @gasdive Před 2 lety +4

      @@thomasstambaugh5181 you're completely wrong. You're not measuring efficiency correctly.
      You absolutely can provide 7 kW of heating using 1 kW of energy.
      It's not free energy, it's not breaking the laws of thermodynamics. You're mixing up available energy with total energy. Enough understanding to have confused yourself, but not enough to understand.

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 2 lety

      @@thomasstambaugh5181 you're wrong though.

  • @6409hamza
    @6409hamza Před 2 lety +20

    I’m so confused, we across Pakistan and other South Asian countries have been using these for years. We just call them Reversible ACs…

    • @alaric_
      @alaric_ Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah but americans didn't know about them until now. And now that they do, they are the "hot new trend", and naturally at somepoint they'll say they invented it.

    • @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd
      @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd Před 2 lety +4

      @@alaric_ this videos was made by People who live in Cali, even the most common things are revolutionary to them.

  • @richarda996
    @richarda996 Před 2 lety

    I have one in a very good insulated A frame camper. Excellent in the summer, not so good when temperatures are
    40* or below. I just try to keep the temperature around 60* inside in the winter. Yes I can warm it up higher, it’s comfy for me. I have been in Texas at 20* for a week.

  • @sgxpress95
    @sgxpress95 Před 2 lety

    Singapore is using centralized district cooling where nearby buildings are cooled using chilled water from a centralized pump station. 40% less energy needed compared to where each buildings have their own cooling system. Buildings already part of this centralized cooling is the Marina Bay Sands, Marina Bay Financial Centre, the 2 MRT(subway) stations in the area and a few more buildings in the Marina Bay Area. Currently, we are building up Tengah new town and future residents of the town can opt for centralized cooling instead of having individual aircon units for their homes.

  • @Patyx42
    @Patyx42 Před 2 lety +41

    Who would win: Billion dollar news corporation or a youtuber from Illinois who really enjoys talking about technology

    • @claytondykstra3301
      @claytondykstra3301 Před 2 lety +3

      Lol if you think Vox is a billion dollar corporation you're out of your mind

  • @astrrra
    @astrrra Před 2 lety +13

    I feel like my technologies are getting connected...

  • @jakovbilic4556
    @jakovbilic4556 Před 2 lety +2

    Great stuff, I would defintely like to see more on this topic and smilar stuff, such as natural ventilation in office buildings (reduction in energy required for cooling by almost 100% )

  • @fueledbylofi7078
    @fueledbylofi7078 Před 2 lety

    In case you didn't understand, a heat pump will heat your house but will also cool it while it heats and in process it makes it cool with the heat or hot with the cool while also maintaining your desired level of heat or coolness

  • @kanderson5555
    @kanderson5555 Před 2 lety +18

    1:42
    Everyone else: Reverse cycle AC
    Americans: H E A T P U M P

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 2 lety +1

      They're not the same though. Every reverse cycle AC is a heat pump, but not every heat pump is a reverse cycle AC. Heat pumps are a broader category that also includes systems that use ground or water sources, as briefly touched on in the video. And just for reference, here in the Netherlands we also call it a heat pump, both in Dutch and in English.

    • @arnekim1922
      @arnekim1922 Před 2 lety +1

      we call it a heat pump in norway

  • @hrishabhdudeja7523
    @hrishabhdudeja7523 Před 2 lety +22

    Vox: The demand for Air conditioning is going to sky rocket and that's alarming.
    Meanwhile Stock market guys: Buy AC stocks...

    • @Chad.Commenter
      @Chad.Commenter Před 2 lety +1

      This video made zero sense. Is a heat pump more efficient than an AC? Is the benefit of heat pumps simply that you can use them in both situations because you won't need furnaces? If most of the world is getting hotter, won't take also lead to milder winters leading to lower heating costs? You can survive in most of India without heaters because it is a generally warm country and the winters are mild. So in that sense, giving people the option to both heat and cool, won't it lead to more people using it just for the sake of it? Thereby increasing carbon emissions? NOT TO MENTION THAT YOUR FURNACES ARE 100's of times MORE ROBUST than any heat pump device that will NEVER last more than a few years, much less decades, leading to more and more production of devices so your argument that you're future proofing your home doesn't hold water either. What was even this video? Are you people all right in the end? WHAT WAS THE POINT OF THE VIDEO PLEASE EXPLAIN.

    • @Sesamestreet9080
      @Sesamestreet9080 Před 2 lety

      We are already having shortages on a/c units

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 Před 2 lety

      Midea: yeahhhh

  • @connorcruz6249
    @connorcruz6249 Před 2 lety +5

    HVAC/R technician here, the one downside inherent with air-to-air heat pumps is that as the outdoor temperature drops, they're SEER rating falls off a cliff. The colder it is outside the less effective they are.

    • @rickquek2751
      @rickquek2751 Před 2 lety

      That is why industry built AC with both heating and cooling functions at the same time, to combat SEER rating falls.

    • @saxybandgeek9645
      @saxybandgeek9645 Před 2 lety

      Unless you spend $$$ for a Mitsubishi Hyper Heat

    • @joemccarthy5508
      @joemccarthy5508 Před rokem

      They are useless below 40 degrees Fahrenheit.

  • @22rsx
    @22rsx Před rokem

    Here in Canada (I live in Manitoba)it's extremely common to have AC. Most houses even 30 years ago had built in AC.

  • @muhammadaliclay8976
    @muhammadaliclay8976 Před 2 lety +6

    i live in pakistan and the thing they are calling HEAT PUMP is called SPLIT AC here and it consumes way less energy than normal ACs..

    • @Google-Account12
      @Google-Account12 Před 2 lety

      split ac has been used for a much long time
      they're calling it either INVERTER or REVERSE CYCLE AIR CONDITIONING for this technology

    • @MoonLiteNite
      @MoonLiteNite Před 2 lety

      Please, do explain how it consumes less energy.....
      It is it the SAME thing as a normal 1 way heat pump (AC system). It has a few extra valves and a relay timer. It by no means use LESS energy to cool the same BTU.

    • @adamt195
      @adamt195 Před 2 lety

      @@MoonLiteNite A normal AC will usually not have a BTU as small as a mini-split. So it uses more electricity.

  • @VoivodApple_2629
    @VoivodApple_2629 Před 2 lety +8

    In India when most families think of an AC, we think of a Window AC or Top AC (what you would call Heat Pumps). Indians call American ACs "Centralised AC"

    • @sephorapiano9602
      @sephorapiano9602 Před 2 lety

      Top AC matlab split AC??

    • @VoivodApple_2629
      @VoivodApple_2629 Před 2 lety

      @@sephorapiano9602 yes sorry

    • @minim6981
      @minim6981 Před 2 lety +1

      we also call it centralized AC in the US. Not everyone has it. Many people only have window units

  • @Mriventivv
    @Mriventivv Před 2 lety

    Glad I’m learning to install these at work

  • @Sledhead
    @Sledhead Před 2 lety

    I just got mine installed in April, I'm looking forward to the cost savings heating my house this winter. I didn't think much about the AC but we used it a lot this summer and it barely cost anything extra to have it running.

    • @Sledhead
      @Sledhead Před 2 lety

      @Rita 25 y.o - check my vidéó I agree, they should put up a part 2

  • @belluh-1huey102
    @belluh-1huey102 Před 2 lety +47

    I expected China has a higher demand for cooling as their entire city has air conditioning for literally every single room instead of just a singular air conditioning system.

    • @godslonelyman2596
      @godslonelyman2596 Před 2 lety

      You mean Cold bombs?

    • @x64emulator
      @x64emulator Před 2 lety

      True, and also that is why the big cities in many large asian cities create a so called urban heat island.

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 Před 2 lety

      @@x64emulator that Phenomenon predated China’s recent economic Modernization. It’s not exactly the air conditioning alone that is hitting up the cities.

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 Před 2 lety

      Usually you’ll be expecting each bedroom and living room to have each air-conditioning of their own. But you definitely see Chinese households being a little bit reluctant on the usage of heating or cooling facilities due to High energy consumption. You definitely observe the creation of different types of related home appliances that almost achieve similar purpose at much lower energy consumption

  • @CamMackay96
    @CamMackay96 Před 2 lety +28

    Wait, what? This isn't close to revolutionary unless you made the video a couple decades back 😂

    • @jmack619
      @jmack619 Před 2 lety +3

      Cam.. 40 years ago

    • @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd
      @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd Před 2 lety +1

      My parents house was built in the 80’s and it had a heat pump didn’t know they revolutionary either.

  • @LeemeSeeYaJAZZhands
    @LeemeSeeYaJAZZhands Před 2 lety

    Mechanical engineer here - the target market for air source heat pumps are climates zones with relatively mild winters (i.e. the entire sun belt of the US). The nominal efficiency or COP of a heat pump can be as high as 4.0. This means 4 units of heat out for every unit of energy in. Compare that to a boiler or furnace that burns at 80% efficiency (COP = 0.8) and you see that heat pumps can be 5x as energy efficient.
    The problem with heat pumps is the derating of performance when it gets truly cold outside. It becomes difficult for the outdoor unit to extract heat from the air when it gets below 20F outside. Manufacturers have made improvements in this area and many manufacturers certify performance at very cold outside temperatures. Mitsubishi calls it "hyper heat." Other less conventional heat exchangers mentioned in the video such as "ground-source" or "water source" perform better in seriously cold weather.
    Overall, I definitely see us moving away from fossil fuel furnaces and boilers in the coming years. Heat pumps are not a new technology and it is a great option for any new construction or renovation in the Sun belt or West Cost. I enjoyed those maps showing the projected cooling need over time.

  • @casey6933
    @casey6933 Před 6 měsíci

    In Australia, it's called 'Reverse Cycle Air Conditioner'. (not a Heat Pump)
    And they've been here for decades.
    And split system (non ducted) reverse cycle air conditioning (heat pumps) are very common

  • @cristiii7605
    @cristiii7605 Před 2 lety +14

    I like how we focus on such minor things as acs but dont worry that a patch of asphalt emits as much as building a car

    • @shaneintegra
      @shaneintegra Před 2 lety

      There is a few companies working on alternatives

    • @Wally_MD
      @Wally_MD Před 2 lety +2

      I see you're just regurgitating what you saw in the newest Kurgzgesagt video in order to sound smart, but you forgot the part where they mention that heating residential homes produces more emissions than all cars combined.

  • @confusedwhale
    @confusedwhale Před 2 lety +4

    Ah, someone watches Technology Connections.

  • @jakcwb
    @jakcwb Před 2 lety +2

    We’ve had a heat pump installed on my home this week, here in the UK. Best decision, especially with the government grants supporting the costs.

  • @interestingvideos6978
    @interestingvideos6978 Před 2 lety

    i love split air conditioners since i first saw them working . they are so silent and efficient.

  • @oseprim
    @oseprim Před 2 lety +4

    One of the thing that it's now as efficient in heating as traditional sources. How much money do you need to keep you house warm when outside is -15 Celsius (5°F)?

    • @iair-conditiontheoutsideai3076
      @iair-conditiontheoutsideai3076 Před 2 lety

      You can't use a heat pump when it's that cold you must use LPG in those extreme temps

    • @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd
      @TinWinkle_nutkins_the3rd Před 2 lety +1

      In those cold temps you the air handler will use a heating element to heat up homes if the temperature outside is at or below freezing.

  • @davidfreeman3083
    @davidfreeman3083 Před 2 lety +3

    There are tiny things that seems surprisingly influential in this. Growing up in Shanghai China I'm more than used to those 'AC units' that basically ACs and heats within the same electric device. And now I'm in NYC, and increasingly a combined heating-cooling unit is very popular, whether it's a central, ductless mini-split (which is the most popular in Asia, Africa, Southern Europe where cooling is needed, as well as even Latin America, but kinda rare compared to others in America), or even through the wall (PTAC) units which for the AC part work very similar to a window unit. And for actual window or even portable units you can now buy ones that have a heating function. However what's kind of noticeable is that at least in most large rental complexes, it's actually still popular, even for the newly built buildings, to use electric AC AND hot-water based heating in the winter (which is usually based off natural gas), IN THOSE SYSTEMS that definitely CAN have a inversible heat pump, and hence use electric heat pump for both cooling and heating. And it seems to me that, a primary reason is that the rental market in NYC has an unspoken 'standard' on utility bills: tenants pay for AC while landlords pay for heating. And using the same electric heat pump would make that separation a lot more difficult. But that separation seems like a must, as especially when we are talking about large apartment complexes owned by corporations as landlords, they're neither willing to start taking the risk and start covering tenants' AC bills, nor are they willing to let the tenants pay for heating during the NYC's brutal winters. Even though either way they can adjust their rent so that essentially on average both parties are paying the same price.

    • @worldchangingvideos6253
      @worldchangingvideos6253 Před 2 lety

      They need "Green Leasing" where the bills are part of the lease and are minimized

    • @davidfreeman3083
      @davidfreeman3083 Před 2 lety

      @@worldchangingvideos6253 The problem is, it's rare. And enabling a major appliance to be more eco friendly usually is far from enough of a reason to implement such a big change

    • @NJRoadfan
      @NJRoadfan Před 2 lety

      Pretty sure Co-Op City in the Bronx includes air conditioning in the rent.

    • @davidfreeman3083
      @davidfreeman3083 Před 2 lety

      @@NJRoadfan That's just co-op city though. Most NYC apartment doesn't. And neither does most other places' apartment. NYC is kinda unique from my experience to have landlord cover for heating cost. (Which is not mandated by law from what I know, but it has just become industrial standard).

    • @NJRoadfan
      @NJRoadfan Před 2 lety

      @@davidfreeman3083 It's common in older apartment buildings in NJ too. Many older buildings had a central heating system with a boiler in the basement. It would be impossible to individually bill people for heating in that case, so they just tack it on the rent. The same for water in many buildings as well.

  • @mlc4495
    @mlc4495 Před 2 lety

    My housing association is looking to replace all gas burners installed in homes with heat pumps. They sent home heating assessors to my home to see if we were eligible for conversion to heat pumps, this was the first time I'd ever heard of such a thing. It was sceptical at the time but as I've learned more about heat pumps I'm eager now to get one installed.

  • @joaopinto415
    @joaopinto415 Před 2 lety +1

    For industrial heating purposes, like producing steel, aluminium and iron, we can also use modular high-temperature reactors, which supply the necessary heat while not emitting carbon dioxide

  • @danielabetts
    @danielabetts Před 2 lety +4

    Great starter video. Here’s the challenge and maybe a good follow on video: if heating is electrified we would create a new winter peak demand, massively increasing the need for energy storage. New technologies might be necessary to avoid this unintended consequence. Also, there is a significant difference between natural gas costs and electricity costs, which is not made up with increased efficiency. How to get heat pump adoption without increasing heating costs is a major challenge. On the edge of the conversation is green natural gas and hydrogen for heating. There is an opportunity to use the existing natural gas infrastructure to deliver natural gas produced from renewable excess capacity. This field is fertile ground for revolutionary highly impactful solutions.

  • @Ceh000
    @Ceh000 Před 2 lety +3

    I grew up in the US where heat pumps are popular. I didn't know they were considered uncommon. 🤔 I think they are freaking awesome.

  • @yonni780
    @yonni780 Před 2 lety

    I grew up in one of the hottest cities in the US where large ac units are the norm. I first noticed heat pumps when I moved to one of the hottest cities in Mexico. It amazed me that they had different solutions to the same problem and I wasn’t sure why at the time. This was enlightening.

  • @unsoughtdrip
    @unsoughtdrip Před 2 lety +2

    Down in Florida everyone has a heat pump. I see them so much I though they were air conditioners.

  • @Vox
    @Vox  Před 2 lety +82

    Thanks for watching! This is the fourth of five videos we're putting out this week and next about climate coverage. You can watch the previous one (about the indigenous practice that could help save our forests) here: czcams.com/video/0o6ezu_h6iE/video.html

    • @nicholax7183
      @nicholax7183 Před 2 lety +1

      ok

    • @chrischan001
      @chrischan001 Před 2 lety +8

      So sad you omitted the efficiency numbers in the video. The heat pump, or called reverse cycle air conditioner in some parts of the world, usually has a coefficient of performance (COP) at about 300%.
      So you use 1 unit of energy to move 3 times of the heat indoor. About the same for cooling as well.

    • @heindeljify
      @heindeljify Před 2 lety +10

      CZcams channel Technology Connections did a great and very detailed video on these.

    • @iair-conditiontheoutsideai3076
      @iair-conditiontheoutsideai3076 Před 2 lety

      Climate change doesn't exist

  • @sambaker3233
    @sambaker3233 Před 2 lety +3

    We have had these for decades in New Zealand! We also call it a reverse cycle air conditioner. In fact, right now I'm sitting under my Fujitsu Nocria 7.5kw heatpump, it's 10 degrees outside, but a nice 21 inside.

  • @mountainslopes
    @mountainslopes Před 2 lety

    So interesting - in BC, Canada we get massive incentives for heat pumps and they're used in almost all new homes, and most renos too

  • @rickquek2751
    @rickquek2751 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for promoting heat pump (or what industry called two way AC), this product has been in market for such a long time but due to pre war building limitations like places in EU applications has been limited.
    These high historical valued buildings still using radiator (with boilers) due to existing pipelines which are difficult to replace.
    Hence, Air To water came in place to replace boilers.
    You may explore how industry has evolved.

  • @CourtneyCoulson
    @CourtneyCoulson Před 2 lety +5

    I have never heard of a heat pump, that's a reverse cycle air conditioner to me. I also didn't realise there are parts of the world that don't need both heating and cooling.

  • @akinoz
    @akinoz Před 2 lety +14

    “Revolutionary”?
    We have these for decades in nearly every Turkish home.

    • @alaric_
      @alaric_ Před 2 lety +3

      What ever is new for americans, it's "revolutionary" and they invented it because they are 'murica.

    • @Tkb135
      @Tkb135 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alaric_ LOL these aren’t new here they just don’t make much financial sense because fossil fuel prices are kept so low here. Once natural gas becomes more expensive in the US they will become more popular.

  • @Verownicarg
    @Verownicarg Před 2 lety

    Been using it at home in Spain for about 18 years. Cool in the summer, warm in the winter. I didn't know that these were "only cool functioning" in some countries, lol.

  • @OsmaroAcosta
    @OsmaroAcosta Před rokem

    For those in the land down under, we call this Split Systems, and we've been using them for sometime now.