Air-water heat pump current consumption and data

  • Erstellt am 2020-09-29 11:06:43

guckuck2

2021-03-09 19:23:06
  • #1


Correct. Both, each set in relation to the purchase price, result in the respective savings. And that's what it's about.
 

Malz1902

2021-03-10 10:06:57
  • #2
Since yesterday, the compressor has been running 24 hours straight, that's not normal, is it? However, the supply temperature remains constant at 30°.
 

halmi

2021-03-10 10:12:40
  • #3
That depends on your heat pump. Fixed or modulating?
 

tomtom79

2021-03-10 10:36:40
  • #4
Then everything is fine. Since she controls the performance herself.
 

Bookstar

2021-03-12 08:59:43
  • #5
So the worst case has occurred. Due to the lack of sun, low heating curve, and generally lousy weather, the room temperature in the bathroom has dropped to 20.9 degrees and the WAF was significantly undershot.

As a result, the government carries around a 2kw fan heater wherever they go. If that's not enough, they take 1-2 hot showers, let their guilt-ridden spouse stoke the wood stove, and also go to the sauna daily. It also negatively affects my diet; mainly hot soups have been on the lunch menu ever since.

All this leads to a significantly increased overall electricity demand, which practically devours the small savings on heating electricity, like killer cells destroy everything created and grown.

My youthful recklessness and adventurous spirit have taught me better this time; the lesson was probably urgently needed.

I thought I was a superhuman when I misused the round knob of my heating system to lower the heating curve from 26.5 to 25 degrees.

It will be a lesson for me! Male parta, male dilabuntur!
 

berny

2021-03-12 09:13:56
  • #6
You poor thing! That can't happen to me in this form. My boss has a few absolutely perfect temperature sensors in the tip of her nose and on her fingertips: At exactly 21.0 degrees, she warns me in advance: It's still okay now. At exactly 20.9, she then “freezes like a dog” and then I would have to quickly heat up the fireplace. But I prefer not to operate that above 0 degrees AT, so I don't even let the underfloor heating get that far. It's a method tested over many years. Btw: From 22 degrees on, one tends to complain about the insane heat in the house...
 
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