Heat Pumps

Why is a heat pump a good idea?

If you’re look­ing for ways to cut your heat­ing bill, con­sid­er that heat­ing and cool­ing account for about half of your home ener­gy use. Also, the eas­i­est way to take a bite out of that part of your bill is with an ener­gy-effi­cient heat pump.

A heat pump is the most effi­cient heat­ing machine on the mar­ket. For every dol­lar of elec­tric­i­ty you put into a heat pump, you get back $2 to $4 of heat. That’s ener­gy effi­cien­cy! Plus, a heat pump also acts as a cen­tral air con­di­tion­er in sum­mer, giv­ing you year-round com­fort.

How much do heat pumps really save?

That varies by fam­i­ly, of course, but if you are using an elec­tric fur­nace, you should be able to save between one-half and one-third on your heat­ing costs. You could switch to anoth­er fuel and low­er your heat­ing costs; how­ev­er, you would not have the com­fort of air con­di­tion­ing dur­ing sum­mer months.

How does a heat pump work?

Instead of mak­ing heat, a heat pump extracts it from the out­side. Your refrig­er­a­tor is a good exam­ple of a one-way heat pump. It removes heat from the air inside the refrig­er­a­tor and moves it to the coils on the out­side (back or bot­tom) of the refrig­er­a­tor.

A large residential air conditioning unit installed beside house.

Have you ever felt the warm air that blows out from under your refrig­er­a­tor when it’s run­ning? A heat pump uses this same prin­ci­ple-extract­ing heat from the air and mov­ing it to where it’s need­ed.

An air-to-air heat pump extracts heat from out­side air. And amaz­ing­ly, even in win­ter the air holds heat, even when the out­side tem­per­a­ture gets down to zero degrees F.

A ground-source heat pump removes heat from the ground, which stays about 55 degrees F year-round. Loops of flex­i­ble pipe are buried in trench­es four to six feet under­ground. The pipe is filled with a liq­uid that absorbs heat from the ground and trans­fers it inside.

Ground-source heat pumps typ­i­cal­ly cost more to install than air-to-air heat pumps, but they are the most effi­cient heat­ing choice because of their heat source-the earth itself. Ground-source heat pumps also may last longer than air-to-air mod­els. There is less wear on the com­pres­sor because they oper­ate over a nar­row­er range of tem­per­a­tures, fol­low­ing the uni­form ground tem­per­a­tures through the year.

Do heat pumps work well in our climate?

Yes. Klick­i­tat Coun­ty has near­ly ide­al cli­mac­tic con­di­tions for max­i­mum effi­cien­cy and per­for­mance.

When it is 47 degree out­side, air-to-air heat pumps extract three units of ener­gy for each unit of ener­gy they con­sume. At an out­side tem­per­a­ture of 17 degrees, they extract two units of ener­gy for each unit of ener­gy con­sumed. Dur­ing more severe win­ter tem­per­a­tures, your back-up fur­nace makes up the dif­fer­ence.

On the oth­er hand, a ground-source heat pump does not use out­door air as a heat source. There­fore, no back up fur­nace is need­ed and effi­cien­cies remain high in the cold­est weath­er.

Are heat pumps reliable?

Because they use the same process, they are about as reli­able as a refrig­er­a­tor. In a study of air-to-air heat pumps per­formed else­where, after 20 years more than half of the heat pumps were still in oper­a­tion. Of these that had been removed, less than half were for mechan­i­cal fail­ures. The rest were for oth­er rea­sons such as chang­ing to a new­er, more effi­cient, or dif­fer­ent size.

If I buy a heat pump, do I still need an air conditioner?

No! One of the biggest advan­tages to a heat pump is that it becomes an air con­di­tion­er in sum­mer. Instead of mov­ing the heat inside, it revers­es oper­a­tion and col­lects the heat from inside the house and moves it out­side. All you need to do is change the set­tings on your ther­mo­stat. A ground-source heat pump will cool for one-half the cost of a nor­mal air con­di­tion­er.

Don’t miss out this sum­mer by installing just an air con­di­tion­er. Install a heat pump for just a few hun­dred dol­lars more, then enjoy cool­ing this sum­mer and effi­cient heat­ing this win­ter.