Air-water heat pump current consumption and data

  • Erstellt am 2020-09-29 11:06:43

Bookstar

2021-06-14 22:49:21
  • #1
What do you mean by that? What does inside nothing happens mean?
 

Zaba12

2021-06-14 23:05:27
  • #2
It stays a constant 23 degrees, whether it is 8 or 30 degrees outside.
 

tomtom79

2021-06-15 00:13:20
  • #3
So without cross-ventilation at night, we have 23-25 degrees during the day, yesterday I had a window and the terrace door open and today a maximum of 20 degrees, but in the evening around 6 pm it’s back to 23 degrees. Tonight it is only supposed to cool down to 20 degrees, so I can’t get the heat out. But it was worse in previous years without an awning. For me personally, it will no longer be a prefabricated house. It is okay but it can be much better. If then, lime sand brick or concrete.
 

guckuck2

2021-06-15 06:29:51
  • #4
Actually, prefabricated buildings are better in this respect due to the lack of mass. You ventilate less against heated masses.
 

Oetzberger

2021-06-15 06:37:15
  • #5

It entirely depends on the duration of the heatwave. For shorter heatwaves, the stone house is *massively* advantageous because it doesn’t heat up in the first place. For longer heatwaves, it’s more of a draw and depends on how much heat can be ventilated out overnight. The days after the heatwave are a bit warmer in the solid house until the components have cooled down again.
 

Deliverer

2021-06-15 08:17:08
  • #6
I'm so glad to be rid of the stress. Small climate control turned on and I no longer have to bring the noise and pollen into the house all night. The energy consumption is a joke (especially with photovoltaics) and the air is also dehumidified at the same time. Especially because of the dehumidifying effect, I recommend a central air conditioning unit to every new builder (yes, even with underfloor cooling).

And before anyone asks: I also thoroughly air out in the morning and shade from the outside during the day.
 
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