harringtondav
Commander
- Joined
- May 26, 2018
- Messages
- 2,440
I'll be doing a DIY installation of a new heat pump w/heat kit back up at our river house.
I've sized the heat kit based on the worst case sub-zero Iowa winters. But I'm concerned under average winter conditions the system will over deliver heat in short interval blasts. With gas fired furnaces, over sizing the burner/HX can result in lower efficiencies since the room thermostat shuts down the burners before the HX, plenum and ductwork have risen to optimum temperature. ...better to be in heat cycle for a longer interval vs. short blasts.
I'm concerned about the same with the electric back up heat. The heater wiring diagram below shows the two heating elements separately connected to L1 and L2: 120 volts each. So I'm considering putting an external switch in one element's line, and operating at 1/2 kW capacity until I need it all, when I'll close the switch for full heat.
The only downside I see is putting my main service legs out of balance a bit. ...I guess that can stress the power company's pole transformer.
I'd appreciate any input or pitfalls I've overlooked.
I've sized the heat kit based on the worst case sub-zero Iowa winters. But I'm concerned under average winter conditions the system will over deliver heat in short interval blasts. With gas fired furnaces, over sizing the burner/HX can result in lower efficiencies since the room thermostat shuts down the burners before the HX, plenum and ductwork have risen to optimum temperature. ...better to be in heat cycle for a longer interval vs. short blasts.
I'm concerned about the same with the electric back up heat. The heater wiring diagram below shows the two heating elements separately connected to L1 and L2: 120 volts each. So I'm considering putting an external switch in one element's line, and operating at 1/2 kW capacity until I need it all, when I'll close the switch for full heat.
The only downside I see is putting my main service legs out of balance a bit. ...I guess that can stress the power company's pole transformer.
I'd appreciate any input or pitfalls I've overlooked.