You're wasting money on heating! Use your A/C!

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • Today we show you how to use an AC unit in an unconventional way to save a lot of energy.
    Find us on Patreon our website and twitter/x:
    / techingredients
    www.techingredients.com/
    / t_ingredients
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @StubbyPhillips
    @StubbyPhillips Před 8 dny +1497

    A) Use a little energy to _move_ heat.
    B) Use a lot of energy to _make_ heat.
    Hmmm, gimmie a minute...

    • @brave_ulysses5958
      @brave_ulysses5958 Před 8 dny +98

      Yes...that sums it up very nicely.

    • @Ed.R
      @Ed.R Před 8 dny +67

      I think this comment deserves to be pinned.

    • @kennixox262
      @kennixox262 Před 8 dny +69

      Because we no longer teach "science" in schools such concepts are lost on many - sadly.

    • @chrisb.7787
      @chrisb.7787 Před 8 dny +71

      The only problem with using this in the winter is that the closer you get to -10f the less efficient it becomes. So it gets harder and harder to heat as it gets colder outside. until eventually It cant do it any longer no matter how much refrigerant you pump it can't effectively move heat. So this is only a complete solution in warm climates. In cold climates gas/wood heat is far better.

    • @user-yt198
      @user-yt198 Před 8 dny +10

      Move heat from hallway to bedroom. Do we heat up our houses like this? 🤔

  • @DerSolinski
    @DerSolinski Před 8 dny +521

    I love how MP is genuinely excited over even the smallest discovery or corrected oversight.
    A real scientist. Please never change.

    • @misterhat5823
      @misterhat5823 Před 8 dny +4

      That's the grandfather of the son of the main presenter's son.

    • @syntaxoid
      @syntaxoid Před 7 dny

      @@misterhat5823 you weren't supposed to figure that out, agents will be at your door in the coming days

    • @lowiq888
      @lowiq888 Před 7 dny

      It is a scam that only works in a trashy empire of gross polluters who can afford to throw away AC compressors. Scientist, or quack scientist? Science seems like a religion for suckers.

    • @RemedialRob
      @RemedialRob Před 7 dny +3

      Eh... he could afford to change a little.

    • @removechan10298
      @removechan10298 Před 6 dny +1

      he released a video on saving heating costs in august during heatwave. he's aiming for the aussie ad dollars?

  • @RonGrethel
    @RonGrethel Před 7 dny +186

    Love that you commented about the smaller units in degrees F vs degrees C and phrased it as more "resolution". Nice way to think about it.

    • @SuperDavidEF
      @SuperDavidEF Před 6 dny +12

      Most units of measure have better resolution in metric. I think it's interesting that temperature measurement has higher resolution in Fahrenheit. But it makes sense. Celsius goes from freezing water to boiling water in 100 units, but Fahrenheit takes 180 units to measure the same change.

    • @4570Govt
      @4570Govt Před 6 dny +1

      @@SuperDavidEFAssuming one is at sea level. But the same theory applies with altitude change

    • @MrRiverGrove
      @MrRiverGrove Před 6 dny +3

      Better for resolution for me too as a novice American scientist I am Fahrenheit sighted.

    • @JCKR-yv4gy
      @JCKR-yv4gy Před 6 dny +3

      The units (C or F) used to prove this experiment, is of no (or at least very little) importance. The change is what is important. Although I live in a metric country, I understand the decision to use F's. I must admit, I've seen many C-thermometers going into one decimal digit, but never (IIRC) into 2 decimal digits.
      LOVE this video.

    • @miamisasquatch
      @miamisasquatch Před 6 dny +5

      Given a delta degree F is 1.8 a delta degree C, a Celsius probe with 0.5C resolution is effectively equivalent to F
      Most probe systems barely give you that level of accuracy anyway though.

  • @lyndonlakhansingh
    @lyndonlakhansingh Před 6 dny +39

    Thank you for taking the time for that demonstration, I've been an A/C & Refrigeration technician for sometime now and first time I've seen anyone demonstrate this.

    • @keetondabber
      @keetondabber Před 3 dny

      It is cool but also common sense for us techs. I was expecting a commercial split system or package unit.

  • @citizenblue
    @citizenblue Před 8 dny +269

    This reminds me of the time I went with my dad to a pawn shop where he was trying to hawk a window a/c unit. It was December or January. The pawn shop employee asked, "It's the middle of winter, what do you want me to do with that thing?"
    My dad, without missing a beat, replied, "Just turn that thing around in the window and you got yourself a heater!"

    • @tripplefives1402
      @tripplefives1402 Před 7 dny +20

      If you know how to welt/solder then you could replace some of the connections with electric valves and convert any air conditioner into one that also behaves as a heat pump. Just connect it so that the inside and outside coils are swapped connections.

    • @DeltaSierra181
      @DeltaSierra181 Před 7 dny +3

      @@tripplefives1402 Are you talking the copper/aluminum pipes or the wires?

    • @tripplefives1402
      @tripplefives1402 Před 7 dny +13

      @@DeltaSierra181 3 way valves are used to change the flow so that the outside and inside coils are swapped. Everything else remains the same.

    • @DeltaSierra181
      @DeltaSierra181 Před 7 dny +6

      @@tripplefives1402 Well shit that should be easy.

    • @tripplefives1402
      @tripplefives1402 Před 7 dny +12

      @@DeltaSierra181 A heat pump unit is basically just an air conditioner with valves to allow the inside and outside coils to be swapped. The compressor and expansion valve are basically the same, though in most off the shelf units the valves are integrated into the compressor.

  • @Truaninonashufodopressure
    @Truaninonashufodopressure Před 7 dny +127

    I bought a heat pump a few years ago and I have no regrets. I went from using 3.5 full 285 gallon tanks of oil per year to 1.5. One thing to note is that the effectiveness and efficiency of the heating will be reduced the colder it gets outside, and you'll start having to deal with things like ice accumulation. You can pay a bit extra for a heat pump designed to work in colder climates, but I'm guessing window units will not work well in this scenario - maybe something worth testing.
    I always thought it was strange that window units don't come with a reverse feature built in. It seems like it would be relatively cheap while adding a significant amount of value.

    • @TylerDurden-pk5km
      @TylerDurden-pk5km Před 7 dny +11

      You can buy any type of AC unit with reversing functionality nowadays - costs only marginal more than pure AC models.

    • @binaryblade2
      @binaryblade2 Před 7 dny +6

      For a bit more money, you can also bury a ground sync to mitigate seasonal fluctuations.

    • @TylerDurden-pk5km
      @TylerDurden-pk5km Před 7 dny +10

      @@binaryblade2 Sure but unless you can do it yourself and have the equipment, "a bit more" could be quite a bit more. :)

    • @devbella5223
      @devbella5223 Před 6 dny +3

      So yes - couple of things you need for the ac unit to heat pump conversion - reversing valve as he mentioned, accumulator as the cycles heat/ac need differing amounts of refrigerant, extra metering device and check valves defrost sensor, defrost timer, you would need to separate the indoor and outdoor fans so you could de-energize the outdoor fan without de-energizing the indoor fan also means you’d need a relay with your timer, you’d need to put some supplemental heaters in during defrost nobody likes to feel cold air coming out of the vent, the indoor fan also would be bringing heat into the system, and the thermostat would need to be swapped - new controls, wiring would need to be modified quite a bit probably best handled by a control board.. but yeah

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 Před 6 dny +6

      ​@devbella5223 There's no need to deenergize either fan since 1) most window ACs use one motor to drive a common shaft carrying both fans and 2) you still need a flow of air over both sides of the loop to move any heat for heating or cooling the interior.

  • @linasvelavicius330
    @linasvelavicius330 Před 7 dny +14

    "we could pretty much exchange the word entropy at any point with equilibrium" thank you for that explanation and application of entropy. It definitely helps me to understand entropy. Looking forward to the next video about improving AC efficiency.

  • @wpgenlighten4truth2
    @wpgenlighten4truth2 Před 7 dny +5

    Thank You so MUCH, I Have Been Wanting to do This experiment for the last TWO Years ...And NOW, I Do NOT have Too.... You Rock !

  • @JOHNDANIEL1
    @JOHNDANIEL1 Před 8 dny +525

    *Been living off grid over 15 years, you can see so much on my channel.* HOWEVER - We have used the output of our multiple small window units ( solar powered ) to make almost all our hot water for 7+ months a year for free. Outbound temps on the AC units exceeds 140 degrees, exchanger recovery is 85% so we get 125 degree water put in storage all day, from it we get 115 to 120 degree water to the showers. My own design, not hard to do.

    • @Jason-ju7df
      @Jason-ju7df Před 8 dny +24

      I just subscribed, Good content but can't find the water heater video

    • @danhle1032
      @danhle1032 Před 7 dny +9

      Me neither

    • @tripplefives1402
      @tripplefives1402 Před 7 dny +35

      If you want to get really efficient, take apart some window air conditioners and convert them so that the exterior coil is submerged in water, then pump the water to a pond outside somewhere and have the water circulate. --oh, I see thats what you said you did, LOL

    • @mromutt
      @mromutt Před 7 dny +37

      huh never thought of that. Places that are really hot year round really should have ac systems that are also the water heater. It would literally be free water heating from waste heat from something you need to have running all the time (like arizona or some parts of texas). Combine it with those instahot things and you would be set even if you didnt need to run ac at night.

    • @WhiteOak09
      @WhiteOak09 Před 7 dny +5

      Been subscribed to your channel for a few years now , great channel

  • @rattech
    @rattech Před 8 dny +154

    Excellent video demonstrating how heat pumps work.
    Just for clarification to anyone confused by the AC unit in the door, hes installed it back to front, on purpose, so that the 'cool' side is dumping its 'coolness' into the hallway, and putting the hot side (that normally would go on the outside of your window) into the room, to heat the room.
    As you can see;
    the resistive heater and fan used 669 watt hours (aka 0.66Kwh) to heat the room by 10.4 degrees F
    The heatpump aka the AC unit, used 197.5 watt hours (aka 0.19Kwh) to heat the room by 16.2 degrees F

    • @ivanjakanov
      @ivanjakanov Před 7 dny +19

      1338 watts for half an hour is 669 wh
      395 watts average (started around 350 watts and went up to 440 watts) for half an hour is about 197.5 wh

    • @rattech
      @rattech Před 7 dny +16

      @@ivanjakanov Good catch thanks, I'll edit my comment, I went the wrong way doubled instead of halved.

    • @lassikinnunen
      @lassikinnunen Před 7 dny +8

      2 way heatpumps are quite common now though. Its the way they sold ac to nordics, used to be that nobody had it.

    • @LRK-GT
      @LRK-GT Před 7 dny +6

      @@lassikinnunen At least in the Western/PNW US, they're rare outside of 208-250VAC In-Wall units.
      I see the 'use' for re-using a Window A/C. They often can be had 'off-season' used for very cheap (if you're willing to fully disassemble and clean.) or, can be had on sale at the edge of the hot season.

    • @fxm5715
      @fxm5715 Před 6 dny +3

      @@lassikinnunen Unfortunately, not so in North America. A couple of units have just come on the market this year, but are at a premium price, and of limited quantity. Low cost "mini-split" heat pumps have become fairly popular, but they are not simple window units.

  • @user-gf3op7kr1p
    @user-gf3op7kr1p Před 5 dny +3

    Startling differences! Your description and explanation of "entropy" is probably the best I have ever seen. Appreciate you, your videos and projects are the most interesting and the most professionally done and I like the way you are able to bring it down to the level where laymen like myself can understand and grasp the concepts.

  • @redshepard5306
    @redshepard5306 Před 7 dny +2

    Your channel is becoming my favorite place to learn. Thanks for everything

  • @elitearbor
    @elitearbor Před 8 dny +206

    With your intro, it reminds me why I watch your channel. Although I do understand heat pumps as used in residential settings, I generally pick up at least a few tidbits from you on ANY subject, no matter how familiar I am with said subject. Keep up the great work!

    • @TylerDurden-pk5km
      @TylerDurden-pk5km Před 7 dny +3

      In reality: 99.9% already have heat pumps that heat dwellings in the developed world - they are called refrigerators. :) (heating effect is minimal of course).

  • @Finite-Tuning
    @Finite-Tuning Před 8 dny +195

    Some 30 years ago now, I had the bright idea of turning a window AC machine around to blow the cold air outside and the hot air inside. I was amazed how well that worked! Almost cut my electric bill by 1/4 if memory serves. And that was only using one small unit, I could have done more with multiple units. There are down sides of coarse, one of them being cold starts. If the room is already cold, you wont get the compressor to start unless you heat the thermal couple. Another is the fan noise, what used to be outside is now inside, so the whole machine is just noisier like this. Water, you have to do something with the condensation buildup. And there is nothing pretty looking about the setup, if that matters to any of you. But it definitely works well otherwise once you get it running.
    Cheers 🍻

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans Před 8 dny +14

      Cool! My heating bill was outrageous last winter. I think I will try this.

    • @user-pp4ve6qo1b
      @user-pp4ve6qo1b Před 8 dny +2

      of *course

    • @BrockGrimes
      @BrockGrimes Před 8 dny +25

      @@ambulocetusnatans use a portable AC unit, you can set the unit on say a porch and just put the round duct in the window to blow the heat inside. All you'll have is noise from the heat blowing in and the AC is outside. Also they dehumidify themselves, so no drain lines.

    • @DRJoe100
      @DRJoe100 Před 8 dny +10

      Another problem is some of the window ac’s are toxic and can’t be vented into the house … I only know cuz I got in trouble as a teen doing the same thing as u 😂. Not sure which tech it is.. or if they still make them that way or not.
      Kinda reminds me of the people that use (I wanna say natural gas) ovens to heat their house and end up dying from the fumes.

    • @jacobe2995
      @jacobe2995 Před 8 dny

      Its freon ​gas. @DRJoe100

  • @DanielMiller82
    @DanielMiller82 Před 6 dny +3

    You guys are one of my favorite channels. Always excited to see what new mad science you are going to show next!

  • @javierlindenthal6680
    @javierlindenthal6680 Před 5 dny +4

    In Germany we have some laws now that keep us from heating our houses, using cheap gas from Russia or cheap nuclear electricity but obligues us to use heat pumps. In Bavaria we get down to minus 16 celsius or zero Fahrenheit so the external unit is covered up in ice while the hot air concentrates under the ceiling making the people sick.
    I installed some vertical tubes with fans but that is very noisy.

    • @RandomNullpointer
      @RandomNullpointer Před 2 dny

      I tried the vertical pipes with fans and didn't get a good result. But what worked is a regular ceiling fan running very slowly. The modern fans that have stepper motors aren't good for such application, so use the old-style AC motor fan which can be controlled with a step-down transformer.

  • @denispol79
    @denispol79 Před 8 dny +155

    Growing in a family of chemist dad, physicist mom, entomologist grandma and chemistry equipment glassblower granddad.
    Watching your videos feels being at home )

    • @mrmadmaxalot
      @mrmadmaxalot Před 8 dny +10

      That sounds like a fun childhood! 😀

    • @denispol79
      @denispol79 Před 8 dny +9

      @@mrmadmaxalot Yeah, I remember frantically washing kitchen walls with my dad and sister after some experiments with metal sodium.
      Before mom comes home )

    • @ivangutowski
      @ivangutowski Před 8 dny +7

      Sounds like a fascinating upbringing

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz Před 8 dny

      The problem here is he claimed an air conditioner made today is twice as energy efficient as an older one, say from the year 2k.
      I want to see experimental data proving they are twice as efficient. I don't believe this claim AT ALL.

    • @SlasherSeven
      @SlasherSeven Před 8 dny +8

      Dude had a great spawn point.

  • @dannyneumann4547
    @dannyneumann4547 Před 7 dny +6

    These descriptions of physical phenomena are so good I listen to them all the way through, even though I have the background and already understand them.

  • @thomasseeger2047
    @thomasseeger2047 Před 2 dny

    What a great video! That just changed my mind. I did not think it would be as dramatic a result. Love your videos!

  • @gunnarblomquist5108
    @gunnarblomquist5108 Před 7 dny +2

    Genuinely excited for the next video!

  • @3v068
    @3v068 Před 8 dny +13

    I love the heat pump videos that you guys do, and also technology connections videos on them as well, alec and yourself always do an amazing job explaining things in very simple terms for everyone to understand how things work.
    Also. Im watching this in my car at the moment and that music is just GOLDEN for my sound system over at the intro, your audio is always fantastic. Thanks for the quality entertainment and knowledge. Its giving me ideas to make a custom cooling system for a server rack i plan on installing in my own home.

  • @EricLadner
    @EricLadner Před 8 dny +4

    I'm amazed at the varied subjects this channel puts out! Love it.

  • @tylerfoss3346
    @tylerfoss3346 Před 7 dny

    I have wanted to install heat pump mini-split air conditioners in my home for years. This video helps prove that I need to get going and just do it.
    Thank you for another wonderful video, doctor!

  • @thomaslotito380
    @thomaslotito380 Před 2 dny

    That made so much sense. Thank you! I just installed a mini split heat pump. Amazing hose efficient it is.

  • @smiteey
    @smiteey Před 8 dny +18

    this is what I needed, you always deliver...

  • @mikenielsen8781
    @mikenielsen8781 Před 8 dny +4

    I always look forward to your videos. Your depth and breadth of knowledge, and the quality of your research, always amazes me.

  • @FPE93
    @FPE93 Před 5 dny

    Thank you for this video, I love the fact that you're doing this experiment and document it. Always interesting to see somebody's else perspective and approach to some concept even if we already had some knowledge of it. Very well presented.

  • @marklovell7481
    @marklovell7481 Před 7 dny

    Thank you for this video. Very helpful for ideas to cut back rising costs. I will be watching for your efficiency enhancement video.

  • @mylivingsky
    @mylivingsky Před 8 dny +12

    Brilliant! Can’t wait for the next one for the saving!

  • @BlueRice
    @BlueRice Před 8 dny +21

    I really enjoy your channel. Your project or testing is unique. You show things that normally no one ever think about.

  • @ntwadumela374
    @ntwadumela374 Před 2 dny

    mind blown!! this is the best real-world illustration i've seen thank you

  • @johnmortimer7862
    @johnmortimer7862 Před 5 dny

    I am very grateful for the video you made a few years ago, showing us how to make bom -- model rockets! Thanks again.

  • @fivestar2227
    @fivestar2227 Před 7 dny +4

    Awesome demo! Patiently waiting for more content like this.

  • @fricki1997
    @fricki1997 Před 8 dny +31

    >Use your A/C
    *cries in moderately old apartment in Germany*

    • @blanksymortimer4088
      @blanksymortimer4088 Před 8 dny +1

      same 🥲 the ac worked crazy fast too

    • @randomusername509
      @randomusername509 Před 8 dny +1

      oh yes. I am happy when we have such summers like now, when there are only few hot days.

    • @hxhdfjifzirstc894
      @hxhdfjifzirstc894 Před 8 dny +4

      The a/c he showed in the video can typically be purchased for about $15 in a pawn shop, LOL. Treat yourself.

    • @josephgauthier5018
      @josephgauthier5018 Před 8 dny

      ​@hxhdfjifzirstc894 here in the US, sure. Things are a little different in Europe, if I'm to assume correctly

    • @junit483
      @junit483 Před 8 dny

      Take solace in your superior construction.

  • @WatchandPrayJesusiscoming

    Just been considering this very subject, thank you ! Looking forward to the next video.

  • @shazzz_land
    @shazzz_land Před 4 dny

    Thank you for all the info and guidance, cheers

  • @Bigshooterist
    @Bigshooterist Před 8 dny +31

    That's extremely interesting. You continue to answer questions that I've never even asked. Thank you for making the norm, absolutely amazing.

  • @mrxmry3264
    @mrxmry3264 Před 8 dny +66

    0:54 you don't need an air conditioner to own a heat pump, just a fridge or a dehumidifier.

    • @miroslawkaras7710
      @miroslawkaras7710 Před 8 dny +7

      Talking about fridge. For the best result the hot side coils should be out side wall (like most commercial system have) - I am thinking to cut the pipes and go thru external wall (presumably fridge is on the same wall to minimised the distance). In winer time you will have fridge cool almost for free. In summer it will not matter it you heating you house or need expel the heat from fridge out side, you always go up heel, but you will reduce heat load in your house.

    • @93bartoszmach
      @93bartoszmach Před 8 dny +6

      @@miroslawkaras7710 just remember to shade coils fom direct sunlight, cause that can increase temperature enough to pop out high pressure presostat in a compressor

    • @cykes5124
      @cykes5124 Před 8 dny +3

      Dehumidifier has coils on same side, you need to have the cold side outside and hot inside. A fridge similiarly has to have the back coil inside with the rest outside, which is hard to do. a window A/C unit is optimal if you don't have a mini split.

    • @ornotermes
      @ornotermes Před 8 dny +3

      @@miroslawkaras7710 It might not work too well. From what i read about freezers the refrigerant has a temperature span, below that it might not be able to transport heat from the inside properly. You need to look up climate classes before doing something like this, some freezers are designed for an ambient temp of 18°C, and the lowest i've seen is 10°C. Plus you need to figure out how to keep, or at least replace the refrigerant if you cut the pipes.

    • @WmSrite-pi8ck
      @WmSrite-pi8ck Před 8 dny

      or a car. vehicle a/c works off the same principle

  • @mowgo9879
    @mowgo9879 Před 6 dny

    I love the videos you guys make! Thank you for yet another great one. And thanks for the abundance of laughs in the previous chili video!

  • @jtzett
    @jtzett Před 4 dny

    Love the explanations! Learned so much!

  • @chrismurrayguitar
    @chrismurrayguitar Před 8 dny +25

    As I hear my A/C running right now, I'm excited for the follow up video.

    • @verothacamaro
      @verothacamaro Před 8 dny +2

      😂 I wish we had the next video a month ago

    • @MindCrime550
      @MindCrime550 Před 8 dny +2

      I dont know what they're gonna say in the next one but misters can be used to cool the hot coils of an AC unit to greatly increase it's efficiency when it becomes heat soaked.

    • @therealchayd
      @therealchayd Před 8 dny +1

      @@MindCrime550 I'm thinking that, too. I've got a circa 1980s portable A/C unit (Toshiba Cool Mini) that uses a water spray kicked up by a fan in order to help cool the condenser. It does a pretty good job for such a small machine. Initially I did think it was just a swamp cooler type, what with needing water and everything, but nope, it's definitely got a little compressor, evaporator and condenser in there which look to have been repurposed from their line of dehumidifiers.

  • @friskydingo5370
    @friskydingo5370 Před 8 dny +7

    Just bought one 3 days ago it's an inverter type. It's over 120° here. It works so much better than my old a.c. and it uses half the power, and now I don't need a separate heater for the winter. Grate video👍 its so hot down here. i can't wait for the next video 🫠

    • @blipblap614
      @blipblap614 Před 8 dny +2

      About ten years ago, I got a new Amana window unit, in a humid climate. The condenser (outdoor) coil dripped condensation into a tray, which came with a drain plug. My installer explained trapping some water in the pan would increase efficiency, as the fan would sling water onto the coil.
      In practice, the standing water became a mold farm. I've seen the same problem with "sonic / cool steam" humidifiers.
      In winter, if I didn't clean my filter religiously, the evaporator (indoor) coil would accumulate frost until it became a giant ice cube.

    • @friskydingo5370
      @friskydingo5370 Před 8 dny +2

      @blipblap614 This one had a double vent pipe. The exuast pipe is inside of the intake pipe, which I thought was weird. It is a portable unit. Normally, the exuast hose would get hot when using the a.c. on my old unit and required insulation to keep it from spreading unessery heat. The dual design eliminates that prolbem. I have checked the drain plugs, and both have no water, and I am running a swamp cooler aswell so it's super humid, and I am surprised that their has ben no condensation. I will keep a look out for it. I have only had my unit for 3 days. Thank you for the advice 🙂

    • @forester057
      @forester057 Před 6 dny

      Won’t work under 40 F degrees. Condensation is going on your floor? Heaters have defrost to keep them working under 40F.
      Your sensitive electronics will be on the outside getting rained on. Not great for it probably 🤨

    • @blipblap614
      @blipblap614 Před 6 dny

      @@forester057 I rarely see below freezing here. Maybe one night a year will be 20F. The unit performed fine until the defrost cycle couldn't pull enough air over the coil due to a clogged filter.
      The outside portion of a window unit is just a fan and a coil, housed in a sheet metal box, insulated with styrofoam.

    • @HeyImBubProductions
      @HeyImBubProductions Před 6 dny

      @@blipblap614 could you post the model you purchased I'm very interested

  • @kevinrey9427
    @kevinrey9427 Před 3 dny

    This was really incredible. Thank you so much

  • @mthiessen134
    @mthiessen134 Před 6 dny

    Love your simple explanations of how things work. Love your channel

  •  Před 8 dny +7

    Good job! Here in Europe, we use heat pump (AC) heating quite extensively. Regarding the next video - I hope it won't be just applicable to integral "window" type AC units you have in the US but to "split" type units too - commonly found across the world, indoor and outdoor units are mounted separately and are connected by lines carrying refrigerants and electric power/signals. Of course, you have split systems in the US too but the window units are much more common in households, as far as I understand.
    I'd also like it if you touch upon the efficiency figures used for heating and cooling, as those are different and often misunderstood or completely ignored by consumers.
    Cheers!

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 2 dny

      Split-system central air conditioning very common in US homes built in the past few decades. 95% of the time this is a split system. The compressor and condenser coil sits outside and the evaporator coil sits on top of the furnace (or in a dedicated air-handler) which distributes cold air via ducts.
      I believe what you are used to is what we call "mini-splits" which is much less common but has become more popular in the past 15 years.

  • @dutchsinse
    @dutchsinse Před 7 dny +39

    Dear Mister Ingredients,
    That space heater you have there at about 1min, the one with the quartz type crystal infrared orange glow radiant heat (no fan in it).
    I did an experiment using this very same heater --- I think you should try repeating it.
    It was about -10F outside, and about 20F in my garage when I did the experiment, but you can do this at room temperature as well.
    Using a cheap plastic 8x11inch fresnel lens, I was able to project "heat" across many feet of the garage in freezing temperatures to deliver the heat to the face of my wife !!
    As it turns out the orange red glow of the crystals is producing some kind of infrared heat as well... and by projecting the orange light from the crystals glowing (using the lens) I was able to deliver warmth of heat at a distance from the cheap space heater .
    This is actually a cool thing to do, since delivering heat across a room without moving any air (no fan) is something I think everyone would want!
    A simple projector lens in front of the glowing orange quartz crystals.. projecting heat many feet away .. increasing efficiency and area of use without the increase of any wattage -- by use of a simple plastic lens.

    • @Hclann1
      @Hclann1 Před 7 dny +12

      You didn't increase the efficiency, you just focused the infrared light, which when it hits.a person feels warm. Look up infrared heater panels. The room stays.cool but the person warms up.

    • @CognosSquare
      @CognosSquare Před 7 dny +3

      Thats really cool. Had no idea you could lense heat.

    • @laserflexr6321
      @laserflexr6321 Před 7 dny +6

      Radiant heat. Long wavelength light emitted, infra-red in the neighborhood of 10,000 nanometers. Interesting that some materials that are optically clear at visible light wavelenghts can be nearly opaque to infra-red, and some materials that transmit infra-red really well will almost completely block wavelengths in the visible portion of the spectrum. Have a look at iR filters to delve deeper. Some of the old Sony Handycams could be converted to sort of night vision cameras by simply removing the iR filter, not as good as a dedicated iR camera, but good enough to see through some types of clothing! You could covertly surveil an acquaintance to know if they have a gun or are just happy to see you.

    • @pseudotasuki
      @pseudotasuki Před 7 dny +4

      Black-body radiation. The wiggling atoms occasionally kick off a photon. The harder the atoms wiggle, the harder the photons wiggle. If they're hot enough, the atoms spit out photons wiggling in the visible spectrum.

    • @dkjoses12
      @dkjoses12 Před 6 dny

      Cool 2 of my favorite CZcamsrs

  • @12thsonofisrael
    @12thsonofisrael Před 4 dny

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience with us.

  • @zelarommoralez
    @zelarommoralez Před 3 dny

    Spectacular work, gentlemen! Thank you!

  • @cadelusk5121
    @cadelusk5121 Před 8 dny +115

    Technology connections is spreading😂

    • @StretchyDeath
      @StretchyDeath Před 8 dny +24

      Say it with me... "The latent heat of vaporization!"

    • @formbi
      @formbi Před 8 dny +5

      @@StretchyDeath the refrigeration cycle

    • @JanicekTrnecka
      @JanicekTrnecka Před 8 dny +12

      And this phrase is a must have: all that by magic of buying two of them...

    • @otakudjr
      @otakudjr Před 8 dny +4

      Wouldn't this be the OG channel?

    • @mromutt
      @mromutt Před 7 dny +1

      he would be so proud XD

  • @barongerhardt
    @barongerhardt Před 8 dny +139

    The comparison being made between resistive heating and a heat pump is reasonable from a tech stand point, but for a lot of people the real comparison is gas (ng/lpg) or wood vs heat pump and the economics heat per dollar.

    • @jeremiahbullfrog9288
      @jeremiahbullfrog9288 Před 8 dny +24

      Yes, also they say "resistive heat is 100% efficient" but they don't consider the losses in generation and transport. Burning the resource on-site would be much more efficient.

    • @brendanwood1540
      @brendanwood1540 Před 8 dny

      @@jeremiahbullfrog9288 Electrical infrastructure is mostly made of aluminum to save costs and because aluminum has a higher tensile strength than copper while also resisting corrosion better. So there is actual substantial line loss up to 25% on average. Most high voltage transmission line isn't insulated too. So you could use a coil or any conductor to receive the induced electric field.
      The first thing to reduce is energy consumption not efficiency. Solid state thermal mass is the best energy regulator. It's all about receiving and directing solar radiation where you want it. Then utilize natural convection and effects like the plenum effect to circulate air. So there is no net energy input or output to gauge efficiency. This would reduce the energy consumption by up to 60% for heating and cooling. Passive solar design and thermal mass.
      If our houses were cars they would be blocks with aerodynamic surfaces facing in the wrong direction, really bad radiator design where the radiator is in a dead air space, wheels that barely spin, and they would be too heavy for the engines we are trying to use. So people are focusing on the engine to make it more efficient when they should be focused on redesigning the whole car or in this case the house. Also taking into account the energy used in the material for construction and the material life cycle. Hint, stone is still the best building material.

    • @Guardian_Arias
      @Guardian_Arias Před 8 dny +24

      The comparison is made between resistive and heat pumps because this is the best case scenario.
      If you consider resistive heaters as 100% percent "efficient" then heat pumps are easily 300% efficient.
      Lastly using propane or other hydrocarbon based fuels you should expect less than 50% "efficiency" this is because a lot of heat is lost to the outside from having to exhaust the carbon monoxide and such. You also loose energy in the unburned smoke and tar escape with the exhaust.
      A lot of the energy lost in the exhaust can be recovered via more elaborate burners such as "rocket stoves" but you still wont reach the efficiency of the power plant burning the fuel for you and transporting the energy to you. Which is incidentally why resistive heating is used as the standard.
      Of course, the cost of electricity vs raw fuels varies drastically around the world. That is a economical and politically charged issue and not with in the scope of this video.
      Ultimately, the most efficient way to heat or cool oneself is to heat and cool oneself. There are lots of jackets and pants with resistive heaters built in to only warm up your self and not your house but that is not as comfortable as walking around in shorts and a t shirt in your home no matter the season.

    • @tobiwonkanogy2975
      @tobiwonkanogy2975 Před 8 dny +7

      @@jeremiahbullfrog9288 i mean the 400ish watts can much more easily fit into solar system , i'd be more concerned when the outdoor air is too cold to really pull useful heat from it . Theoretically possible by just turning the window air conditioner around each season. What sort of heat would you use , the resistive heater or potentially gas/wood/oil/electric furnace as supplemental?

    • @Pixelgel
      @Pixelgel Před 8 dny +9

      ​@@jeremiahbullfrog9288 There is plenty of loss in collection and transport of gas as well, it would be difficult to compare the two losses since gas companies aren't going to be keen on publishing these figures.

  • @gydo1942
    @gydo1942 Před 7 dny

    Very cool demonstration, I'm looking forward to the next video!!

  • @sk8pkl
    @sk8pkl Před 6 dny

    I love your channel so much. Free valuable information is priceless! Thankyou so much!

  • @GLZEPHEAD69
    @GLZEPHEAD69 Před 8 dny +7

    I'm currently living in a camper so the heat-pump and ac efficiency video are very interesting to me.

    • @faustinpippin9208
      @faustinpippin9208 Před 8 dny +3

      Campers are so small you can Heat them up with your farts when you have good isolation

    • @stasi0238
      @stasi0238 Před 8 dny

      Wood stove in camper is more efficient

    • @woody442
      @woody442 Před 8 dny

      @@GLZEPHEAD69 in mobile devices you have to account for weight and energy density (specific energy). Gas has a much higher energy density (specific energy) than any battery. You will be able to heat ~50 times longer with 10kg of gas, than a 10kg battery.

    • @GLZEPHEAD69
      @GLZEPHEAD69 Před 8 dny +1

      @faustinpippin9208 in the winter they're cold af. In the summer they're hot af. There's no insulation and it's 30yrs old. I'm using window air conditioners because the roof one doesn't work any more and in the winter the furnace uses a 20lb tank of propane every 3-4 days costing me a fortune

    • @cia212
      @cia212 Před 8 dny

      For small campers, the Ecoflow Wave 2 is excellent if you can get it on sale.

  • @REPEAT63
    @REPEAT63 Před 8 dny +7

    This is incredible, I live in an older house, circa 1905, with no duct work and 5 units I put in the windows every summer. With this, I can use them year around and cut my heating bill while doing it. I've had issues with tripping circuit breakers because the wiring was set for minimum usage in bedrooms. I can power 5 ac units to heat with the power of 2 resistive units with energy to spare, this is crazy!

    • @voicesarefree
      @voicesarefree Před 7 dny +2

      Efficiency drops for heating when the outside temperature gets lower. Still makes sense in some climates, but not sure you will get far with window units vs. a ductless heat pump. If you are rural, consider ground sourced for good efficiency year round.

    • @mrbmp09
      @mrbmp09 Před 7 dny +2

      @REPEAT63
      Are you going outside several times per day to adjust each window unit?
      The controls are now outside... ....in the weather. I don't think you have thought your plan thru.

    • @StevesAutoNtrucks
      @StevesAutoNtrucks Před 7 dny +2

      @@mrbmp09 get a ac with remote control

    • @REPEAT63
      @REPEAT63 Před 7 dny

      Simple fixes, you can put it on high and attach the plug to a thermostatic control unit, plug into a thermostat that turns on and off based on the temp in the room. It works automatically.

    • @wheelerthree
      @wheelerthree Před 7 dny +4

      as others have stated - they make Mini-splits that have the heat pump built in to reverse the expansion valves. This was a proof of concept for how heat pumps work, not a 'do this at home'.
      When your AC reads the thermal temperature outside as being cold, it will stop running
      When it gets colder outside, the unit becomes far less efficient
      The controls are on the outside
      The fans are WAY louder on that side
      Water will be dripping on your floor

  • @themonkeydrunken
    @themonkeydrunken Před 6 dny

    I always learn something from every video you post. Thanks for putting this together! :)

  • @jimhanfling
    @jimhanfling Před 7 dny

    I appreciate the effort taken in the layout and explanation of the experiment

  • @FuS3D86
    @FuS3D86 Před 8 dny +9

    Why hasn't CZcams given this channel a tick yet? It deserved one years ago.

  • @stephanematis
    @stephanematis Před 8 dny +12

    Clear and simple explanations with accessible demonstrations. Aces.

  • @joshuazerubbabel5951
    @joshuazerubbabel5951 Před 6 dny

    Really astounding! Thank you for this. 👍 ❤

  • @jean-lukehartley2998
    @jean-lukehartley2998 Před 7 dny

    Thanks for a great video, and I'm looking forward to the follow-up

  • @TimpBizkit
    @TimpBizkit Před 5 dny +4

    I suppose you could wall mount your fridge freezer to the outside, though you might spend more money if people steal your food 😆.

    • @animeloveer97
      @animeloveer97 Před dnem +1

      you coan install locks i guess lol my freezer had them

  • @fabio-franco
    @fabio-franco Před 7 dny +53

    Finally someone explains a heat pump. In an intuitive way. Why nobody else said that is just an AC on reverse? Thanks again professor.

    • @Ali_Boyrati
      @Ali_Boyrati Před 7 dny +21

      everybody says that actually. Refrigeration cycle = reverse heat pump cycle

    • @corprall
      @corprall Před 7 dny +9

      It's not AC in reverse, it's just AC. Term has nothing to do with the directionality of the system.

    • @jaykoerner
      @jaykoerner Před 7 dny

      ​@@corprallpedent

    • @donniedonnie639
      @donniedonnie639 Před 7 dny +2

      It has a couple other needed modes, but that is basically how it works.

    • @Bepissmall
      @Bepissmall Před 7 dny +16

      Check out techconnections videos on heat pumps, he explains them just that way but much more in depth if you are interested

  • @janedagger
    @janedagger Před 7 dny

    Your vids take me back to my early school days and those wonderful Mr Science films, thank you soooo much.

  • @patrickb2862
    @patrickb2862 Před 7 dny

    Really good information on how to save money. Thank you for the videos

  • @stoffmeister7095
    @stoffmeister7095 Před 8 dny +79

    One thing to be mindful of: If you wish to use this A/C-setup in order to heat a room during winter, you need to make sure that the heat battery (the radiator you see on the back) doesn't drop below 12-13 degrees C. If it freezes, it will break. So forget about putting it outside in freezing temperatures, and make sure the room that has cold air being blown into it never drops below that temperature limit.

    • @D4no00
      @D4no00 Před 8 dny +12

      commercial units have already defrosting built in for this, but it sucks because if it is really cold outside, the defrosting can take up to 30 minutes, the time where no hot air will blow inside.

    • @TylerDurden-pk5km
      @TylerDurden-pk5km Před 8 dny +17

      Under the assumption that the refrigerant would be water - which is it not.

    • @TylerDurden-pk5km
      @TylerDurden-pk5km Před 8 dny +30

      @@D4no00 That is not the reason for defrosting - it is to remove external ice buildup, not to stop the refrigerant from freezing. The refrigerant is obviously not water ...

    • @marshallgoat
      @marshallgoat Před 8 dny +3

      I watched this and immediately thought this would work great to some energy efficient heating into a small 10x10 grow house during the winter.
      I'm curious how you would determine at which temperatures it makes sense to do this. From my understanding a heat pump is still good down to nearly 0 degrees Celsius. Is it dependent on the refrigerant type?
      What would be the issue here and how could one get around it?

    • @klausnielsen1537
      @klausnielsen1537 Před 8 dny +6

      ​@@marshallgoatIT will still be more efficient than a resistive heater well below 0°C. But I suppose a kilo watt meter would easily show when the efficiency craps out. Here in Denmark we have single split units that guarantee efficiency to. -20°C and will still generate heat down past that.

  • @jjg1501
    @jjg1501 Před 3 dny +3

    here is the problem with heat pumps in general. it takes much more energy to extract heat out of something that has alot less heat in it to begin with. ie its easy to move heat from a 70F degree room to a hallway but its alot more difficult to move heat from a 0F room to the hallway. (heat and energy are the same thing in this context)

  • @Mr.No.Tv.Community
    @Mr.No.Tv.Community Před 7 dny

    Amazing demo. I can't wait to see how you improve the efficiency.

  • @user-oe2zs4td4b
    @user-oe2zs4td4b Před 4 dny

    I am absolutely amazed. . Thank you.

  • @Ma_X64
    @Ma_X64 Před 8 dny +13

    Have to say something about increasing A/Cs effectiveness. I have an aggregate from a mobile A/C. As an A/C it was very ineffective because it throws air out of the room and some new air goes from outside. I disassembled it, took out the refrigeration unit and bent the condenser radiator down to a horizontal position. Then I put it all in the bath and filled it with cool water so that it just covered the condenser, and the evaporator was above and blown by a fan. This is how I cooled my apartment. The heat went into the water, the cold air into the room. I noticed that the compressor itself heats up quite significantly. Although its lower part was also in the water, it was tall, and there was no good heat transfer. I started pouring water directly onto the side of the compressor, and that’s when I noticed that the efficiency of cold production had increased greatly, because before my eyes, the evaporator became covered with frost, and then with ice. I can't say why is that so. It seems at first glance that the condenser must be the main point that you should cool down.

    • @fabiankonrath2804
      @fabiankonrath2804 Před 8 dny +1

      Cool! There are mobile ACs now that do that, it works but has a limited capacity. You could also have used a second pipe to suck in air from outside by covering the compressor air inlets of the AC with a box and connecting the second pipe to it.
      This way there is no underpressure in the room and works way better. Thats how i did it.
      There are some videos on youtube about it. (I guess in english too)

    • @sompka1
      @sompka1 Před 8 dny +1

      Wait, so you were just putting the heat into a bucket of water in your room?

    • @frollard
      @frollard Před 8 dny +6

      @@sompka1 It may surprise you to learn that some industrial processes use municipal potable water as their cooling supply since the few dollars per cubic meter of water (250 gallons) at 15c coming from underground could sink way more energy from their process than the equivalent energy to run a chiller.

    • @Ma_X64
      @Ma_X64 Před 8 dny

      @@sompka1 a bath. Water drains heat very fast from metal objects. Much faster than air.

    • @GodsMistake
      @GodsMistake Před 8 dny +1

      I don't understand this entire video or comments. Does your country not have reverse cycle air-conditioning?

  • @Avboden
    @Avboden Před 8 dny +44

    Heat pumps are the ONLY way to go these days. My current home has a multi-zone ductless mini-split heatpump system. Each room has its own head unit with two main heatpumps outside (mitsubishi hyperheat). The system works down to -12F and keeps up pretty well even at those temps. It's SO efficient you wouldn't believe it. Plus being able to independently control the temperature of each individual room is simply amazing. Of course forced air heat pumps are still great, but the efficiency of these ductless systems are even better. Also have a heat-pump water heater which is great.

    • @bobsterclause342
      @bobsterclause342 Před 8 dny +3

      They do math shenanigans
      Lets do more than one hundred percent efficiency.
      You can always make things less ifficient, and if thats you definition of efficiency

    • @GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket
      @GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket Před 8 dny +21

      @@bobsterclause342 No it's PHYSICS not math shenanigans. When you're moving energy instead of making it, it isn't hard to be more then one hundred percent efficient.

    • @CD-vb9fi
      @CD-vb9fi Před 8 dny +15

      No they are not. Once it gets too cold a heat pump will fail. My house has one on it. Once the temperature outside gets too low it can no longer heat the house and I have to rely on resistance heating to bring the house to comfortable temperatures. Heat pumps work on the principle of "exchange". The "coolant" being use has limits and depending on it's performance along with the design of the system operating with it. This experiment is working between two environments with similar temperatures. This will greatly show the efficiency differences... but when two very different environments are experimented with... the limitations quickly being to show.
      If the cold side cannot get "colder" than the environment it is in... it will cease to perform at all. This is the same as the hot side when it cannot get "hotter" than the environment it is in. This is why your house AC works harder when the temps are in triple digits.
      Yes... it is very efficient... at first.... but the greater the disparity in environments... the less efficient it becomes. NONE of this is recent news.

    • @thetoasterisonfire2080
      @thetoasterisonfire2080 Před 8 dny +2

      ​@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket
      What do you mean. Physics in general is absolutely math shenanigans.

    • @ZAKKORD
      @ZAKKORD Před 8 dny +6

      @@CD-vb9fi There are winter heat pump setups but you have to bury long pipes throughout your yard and run coolant through them, extracting heat from the ground below the freezing depth.

  • @WizardClipAudio
    @WizardClipAudio Před 6 dny

    I wholeheartedly agree with your reasoning for using Fahrenheit. Thank you for being awesome. ❤

  • @36686593
    @36686593 Před 6 dny

    Great channel, you’re an amazing teacher.

  • @ShadeHope1969
    @ShadeHope1969 Před 8 dny +5

    Outstanding. I am an HVAC specialist. Lovin this video series, But then again I have loved all the videos coming from this channel. Now I will say if you dont understand I know its hard for a guy as smart as this to transfer the meanings in to lamens terms, I have various ways to explain this talking to customers that know NOTHING. I think it was a great job of breaking it down and excited to see the next video,Always Outstanding work !!

    • @stuartfox5989
      @stuartfox5989 Před 5 dny

      Agreed - the entropy explanation was perhaps a bit overdone and hard to understand for many - easier to tell people that one doesn't make cold, one removes heat or moves it from one place to another and flow can be reversed similarly to a bath manual faucet / shower head valve AND that even while there the air seems cold, there is still some heat present. The efficiency point is reasonably demoed though the information could be improved in other ways.

  • @JohnboyCollins
    @JohnboyCollins Před 8 dny +10

    Awesome demonstration. Keep in mind this is close to an ideal condition for a heat pump. They lose efficiency as the temperature difference between the hot and cold side increases. To impress skeptics, would be cool to do a demonstration in worst possible conditions.

    • @jamesdenton3692
      @jamesdenton3692 Před 8 dny

      YES love to see a efficiency- power curve graph for us in colder climates .

    • @tullgutten
      @tullgutten Před 8 dny +1

      Mine gives about or over 5 KW heat for just under 2 KW power at -30°C

    • @JohnboyCollins
      @JohnboyCollins Před 7 dny

      @@tullgutten pretty impressive. I guess main consideration is if you have poor insulation in a very cold climate you need a hell of a lot of electricity to heat a large volume. Heat pumps are more constrained in where they can be placed. You can stay warm with a small radiant heater by your bedside. For a modern build, no doubt a heat pump is the way to go.

    • @miamisasquatch
      @miamisasquatch Před 6 dny

      ​@@tullguttenhow and where are you running a heat pump that cold?!? Northern Canada?
      Assuming a 410A system and a 16C indoor temp you're looking at a lift ratio of over 7! That's an extreme compressor unless you're running a cascade system!!!!

  • @jameso7826
    @jameso7826 Před 4 dny

    I love this channel, I wish more of YT was like this.

  • @lexisnep525
    @lexisnep525 Před 3 dny

    This is an incredibly good and scientific demonstration. Major kudos to you for making this. Thank you for contributing to the furtherance of knowledge 9n this subject by demonstrating in a creative and easy to understand way.

  • @Oli4Post
    @Oli4Post Před 7 dny +5

    If I have ever seen a better demonstration of explaining something truly relevant, this is it.

  • @Krebzonide
    @Krebzonide Před 8 dny +4

    I really want you to do a similar test with a peltier device and compare the efficiency of heating with that vs resistive heating.

    • @dermotdobson2700
      @dermotdobson2700 Před 8 dny +2

      You do get a small gain, but the amount of engineering you have to do to insulate the input and output sides, while ensuring enough heat flow through the active faces isn't really worth it.

    • @AtlasReburdened
      @AtlasReburdened Před 8 dny +1

      Yeah, relatively marginal gains because their COP *rapidly* deteriorates with increasing DeltaT. As an academically interesting point, their COP is outrageously good when the DeltaT is miniscule, but there's practically no real world applications for such a scenario.

    • @markmedrano8073
      @markmedrano8073 Před 7 dny +1

      tecs are really inefficient compared to compressor based cooling, especially at higher temperature differentials. I couldn't find any hard numbers on a quick search but the rule of thumb seems to be a phase change system is about 3x more efficient than a tec. So compared to resistive heating it should fall somewhere in the middle. A resistive heater moves no heat and "creates" a lot, a tec moves a little heat and creates a medium amount (net still more than resistive), and a phase change system moves a huge amount of heat and creates a little (net massively more than resistive).

  • @walnuthead101
    @walnuthead101 Před 7 dny

    Thanks for your work

  • @pesty.wizard
    @pesty.wizard Před 3 dny

    very interesting! can't wait for the next one

  • @MattTrevett
    @MattTrevett Před 8 dny +5

    Where I'm at the electricity is WAY more expensive than gas so while it's more efficient to use a heat pump, it's much cheaper to run a gas furnace.

    • @BramMertens
      @BramMertens Před 7 dny

      Hopefully you'll be able to PV panels and turn that around and avoid burning fossil fuels.

    • @swisschalet1658
      @swisschalet1658 Před 7 dny +1

      @@BramMertens hopefully the people who believe the “fossil fuels are bad/electricity is good” nonsense will wake up to reality someday.

    • @BramMertens
      @BramMertens Před 7 dny +1

      @@swisschalet1658 please enlighten me.

    • @jounisaari9471
      @jounisaari9471 Před 6 dny +1

      @@swisschalet1658 In Finland our electricity is only about 5 % fossile. And we have much cheaper electricity than most of Europe. We don't use gas for households, but typically a house has 3*35A 240V electric connection. Good enough for 9kW sauna stove, cooking and heating same time. We have 5 nuclear reactors, thousand if wind turbines, hydropower, bioenergy. We buy also Norwegian and Swedish hydropower, if there is too little wind.
      We use very little gas, we don't have pipeline from Norway and Russian pipelines are proven unreliable, and we don't want to do business with Russia anymore. Russia is a mafia that has a state. Better stay away. They already stole our power plants and factories invested in Russia.
      We just opened our own uranium mine also. We are also going to mine all minerals needed for electric cars, better not to be dependent on some authoritarian countries. Electrifying our road traffic would increase electricity needs only 10%. We used to have higher consumption 10 years ago, efficiency has improved and paperfactories closed.

    • @swisschalet1658
      @swisschalet1658 Před 6 dny

      @@jounisaari9471 Electric cars can be centrally controlled, and stopped anytime the controllers want to stop you. All types of mining are environmentally damaging...so I don't know how you could consider that "green"...only because the brainwashers convinced people of that. Your houses in Finland are extremely small compared to US houses, and you have little need for air conditioning. Not really comparable.

  • @Michel-Uphoff
    @Michel-Uphoff Před 8 dny +25

    I have also experienced that many people find it difficult to fathom that a certain amount of energy for a heat pump can make a room much warmer than with the same amount of conventional heating. It seems like a violation of the law of conservation of energy.
    Then I like to use the following simple analogy:
    A room is cold, but instead of heating that room with a heater, I drive a tank of hot water in from outside, and that heats up the room. Takes little energy, because I don't generate it, I move/pump it to the room. And if I want to cool the room, I wheel the hot tank outside. That's what an air conditioner / heat pump does: Move heat from one place to another.
    btw: Most modern "airco's" are bidirectional nowadays, so in fact air-to-air heatpumps.

    • @MyProjectsTV
      @MyProjectsTV Před 8 dny +1

      I just say the heat pump uses energy to run plus moving the heat from the outside in. The heat hat's moved brings you over the 100% simple as that.

    • @linuxranch
      @linuxranch Před 8 dny +7

      I wish there were a requirement that all air conditioning systems sold be bidirectional heat pumps.
      The actual cost of turning an air conditioner into a heat pump is quite small.
      In North America where the normal climate extremes are in the sweet spot for heat pump efficiency, the annual energy savings would be significant.
      And the efficiencies of mass production would bring the cost down even further.
      There would be a slight reliability hit.. but well worth it overall.
      In the 1970's Honeywell did a demonstration project of a solar powered heat pump system, where the energy necessary to run the "machine" was gathered using glycol filled solar panels, and storing the heat in an insulated glycol tank for nighttime use.
      The two different heat pumps were tested. One was a piston type refrigeration machine powered by a turbine. The working fluid powering the turbine was Freon. Not only did the unit provide cooling, but an AC generator driven by the same Freon turbine provided power for lights, pumps, controls, and fans!
      The second machine demonstrated the use of an Arkla type chemical heat pump, where the heat source driving the chemical reaction was the glycol heat storage system.
      In Florida, in the summer time, we often had to leave the doors open "wasting" cool air, because we generated so much surplus heat that the glycol solution would BOIL inside the solar panels.
      The panels were about 40' x 20', and the system load was a pair of tractor trailers, parked side by side.
      The panels were mounted on the top and side of the "southern most" trailer, and were hydraulically tilted to match the average solar angle.. (no active tracking was used .)
      The first trailer held all the equipment and heat storage facility, and a small monitoring/control area.
      The second trailer held lighted poster board displays describing the system and seating for meetings/classes... And was the "system load".

    • @andrewsmith1735
      @andrewsmith1735 Před 8 dny +2

      Company near me sells well connect heat pumps. They extract what you need from the water you use. The energy density of the water and the volume make it viable.

    • @gordon1201
      @gordon1201 Před 8 dny

      But this is the thing I don't get, it's COLD outside.. so how does transporting cold air inside do anything..

    • @andrewsmith1735
      @andrewsmith1735 Před 8 dny

      @gordon1201 the outside is 30⁰ pull the heat out until it is 10⁰ that's 20⁰ of heat

  • @Gr8Passion4Music
    @Gr8Passion4Music Před 5 dny +1

    This is indeed very interesting! Kindly share your next video that you mentioned soon, thanks.

  • @male42nfree
    @male42nfree Před 2 dny

    Wow, thank you! Great information and video!!

  • @lambdatempest
    @lambdatempest Před 6 dny +3

    I get more excited by videos from this channel than probably any other channel.

  • @GrowingAnswers
    @GrowingAnswers Před 8 dny +9

    I’ve been using my small 7cf chest freezer filled with about 16g of water along with a 12v small transfer pump to flow the cold water from the freezer to a PC heat exchanger in another room that’s 120sf. I have a cutoff switch to keep the freezer water no colder than 35f. I can run it for a week straight in near 100f ambient and keep the room about 5 degrees F colder than the rest of the house with a 100mm heat exchanger using about 140 watts. The water in the freeze equalizes at about 44f when running constantly. I use 2 noctura pc fans in series to blow the air through the exchanger. Doing the math though, compared to a traditional window ac it used the same power over time since one runs intermittently and the other is constant. The upside is one is near silent and still works if the power is out for a few hours if the pump runs on a small pocket sized battery bank. I have had questioned asked as to why I don’t use an antifreeze and run it colder. The reason is because the heat exchanger would frost over and eventually the circulating water would equalize back to the same 44f anyway. I feel the room environment is much better regulated than an intermittent ac system. The principle is the same as a mini split which is what many heat pumps are used in these days. I think another benefit of the low wattage use is it can be more easily ran off a wider range of generators and battery units with lower starting/total amps.

    • @PhattyMo
      @PhattyMo Před 7 dny +1

      I do something very similar. A small fan+radiator from a PC,some vinyl tubing,wire,and a small 12Volt pump. I use the bathtub (or kitchen sink) filled with cold water from the tap (maybe 40-50 degrees F). It's not much extra cooling,but it does help,and only uses about 15W of electricity (It could easily be solar/battery powered). Once the reservoir of water is warmed,I just drain it and refill it with more cold water. It's enough to get a nice cool breeze in the room on warm days,but when it's really hot out,I need the big A/C.
      (It also works as some extra heat in winter,if you have a source of warm/hot water.)

    • @wheelerthree
      @wheelerthree Před 7 dny

      @@PhattyMo Your PC is a great source of warm water if you liquid cool, though probably RIDICULOUSLY inefficient :D

  • @sleepyj222
    @sleepyj222 Před 7 dny

    Your music got me pumped to learn about heatpump and ACs

  • @Keet619
    @Keet619 Před 7 dny

    Nice work! Concise, to the point and accurate, thanks!

  • @thedave1771
    @thedave1771 Před 5 dny +6

    “The fan itself generates some heat” thank you for considering that.
    I get so frustrated with people that think fans cool a room, when the reality is the opposite.

    • @jjg1501
      @jjg1501 Před 3 dny

      fans dont cool a room they cool you. they do this be creating air current that increases evaporation. the outcome is a cooler room from the perspective of the human experience.

    • @thedave1771
      @thedave1771 Před 3 dny

      @@jjg1501 absolutely. And that’s a huge difference, for example when people leave fans on while they’re out so that the room is cool when they get home.
      It’ll be warmer, although probably imperceptibly, but definitely not cooler.

    • @jjg1501
      @jjg1501 Před 2 dny

      @@thedave1771 ive never heard of anyone doing that. i leave my ceiling fan on when i leave simply because im to lazy to turn it off. it does not make my house hotter considering i dont have air conditioning at all. 1 degree means little when your house is 88 degrees, lol

    • @thedave1771
      @thedave1771 Před 2 dny

      @@jjg1501 sadly, I have.

    • @jjg1501
      @jjg1501 Před 2 dny

      @@thedave1771 are you saying you left a fan on while not home or not in the room because you actually believed it made a room cooler?

  • @DocProctor
    @DocProctor Před 8 dny +3

    Heatpumps are the major form of AC used here in Norway AFAIK, there's even the possibility to get money back from the state if you install one.

    • @brnmcc01
      @brnmcc01 Před 7 dny

      Yeah but no electricity in Norway comes from fossil fuels, so using heat pumps in places like Norway, British Columbia or Idaho where all the electricity is hydro is a no brainer.

    • @zilfondel
      @zilfondel Před 7 dny +2

      Some states in the US also offer subsidies! Myself and a few friends have installed heat pumps in the states.

    • @DocProctor
      @DocProctor Před 7 dny

      @@zilfondel
      Now, if only the rest of the States would do the same 😁

    • @DocProctor
      @DocProctor Před 7 dny +1

      @@brnmcc01
      Doesn't matter what your electricity production scheme is, lowering your own use is _always_ a good idea.
      It's especially a good idea if you rely on fossil fuels

    • @meisievannancy
      @meisievannancy Před 5 dny

      In South Africa the municipalities get tax from electricity production and so they use drones to see who is using solar to save money and then apply a punitive tax to those households who don't use state electricity.

  • @jdm-vk8ty
    @jdm-vk8ty Před 5 dny

    definitely looking forward to the next video

  • @byronmorris1594
    @byronmorris1594 Před 9 hodinami

    Thank You for teaching me this. I will do this in my experiment in this.

  • @MrWneild
    @MrWneild Před 7 dny +3

    It is amazing how many people do not understand how heat pump works. Someone I know with a degree in physics was insisting that you cannot get above 100% efficiency. I finally convinced this person to watch a couple of videos explaining the technology and now they get it. It simply takes more energy to create heat than it does to move already existing heat even when the "heat" to be moved inside is at 10 degrees F. It is counterintuitive to have a system move what is "cold" to warm up an already warm area!

    • @christianmartin8751
      @christianmartin8751 Před 5 dny

      Yet it is easy to explain. As long as you capture just the heat from the power of the motor you get the same efficiency as a resistor and that is 100%.
      The rest of the gaz cycle gives you everything that is above 100%. That amount above is the counterpart to the cooled air you expel outside.

  • @Mia-xu9zn
    @Mia-xu9zn Před 8 dny +141

    Technology connections is spreading.

    • @Novashadow115
      @Novashadow115 Před 8 dny +1

      ​@@Tsumi7 oh lord yes

    • @PortalAuditor
      @PortalAuditor Před 8 dny +7

      Increasing entrophy

    • @Grunttamer
      @Grunttamer Před 8 dny +9

      its the magic of buying two of them

    • @BrandEver117
      @BrandEver117 Před 8 dny +5

      Guys, look at the profile. This is a bot that steals other people's comments to seem less like a bot. Report it as spam and move along

  • @jackiegantt6001
    @jackiegantt6001 Před 5 dny +1

    You have done some pretty cool stuff, I think this is your best video since you built the speakers from the flat panels.

  • @kerzwhile
    @kerzwhile Před 6 dny

    Absolutely Fascinating!!

  • @allinclusive5762
    @allinclusive5762 Před 8 dny +6

    there is one problem here in good old germany: electricity is 5 times more expensive than gas, for example

    • @voinea12
      @voinea12 Před 8 dny +1

      but due to the efficiency of ac, per kw you're still getting almost the same amount of heat

    • @allinclusive5762
      @allinclusive5762 Před 8 dny +2

      @@voinea12 yes - but I already have the gas boiler and the heat pump would cost me €30,000 😞

    • @voinea12
      @voinea12 Před 8 dny

      ​@@allinclusive5762 you can just get a couple ordinary air conditioners, for my house 3 or 4 300$ air conditioners should be enough , and all the ones I've seen also support heating with reversible valves the only thing is they don't also heat your water, unlike the very expensive central ac you mentioned

    • @Jimunu
      @Jimunu Před 8 dny +1

      That's an expensive heat pump.

    • @kx4532
      @kx4532 Před 8 dny +4

      Use a gas engine to pump heat.

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 Před 6 dny +3

    *ALL AC UNITS IN EUROPE* are reversible for heating - I cant believe that you guys dont have this....????

    • @robert5
      @robert5 Před 18 hodinami +1

      Both types of systems are commonly available here. I recently sold a house in wa state that had a heat pump/AC, it heated and cooled. I moved to a house in MI that has a AC unit that works like a heat pump but it only works as an AC. Reason for that is my house is heated via natural gas in winter. Soon I plan on installing solar panels to run the AC unit in summer since it is our biggest user of electricity.

  • @nilsenfabiansanchez7166

    Love your videos and the way you explain everything.
    I would pay to sign up for your classes

  • @Emanemoston
    @Emanemoston Před 6 dny

    Awesome. Thanks for the video.