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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Q&A - Sizing Heat Pumps for Heat Load - Short #213

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Training, Careers, Airconditioning, Self-improvement, Hvac, Business, Education, Refrigeration, Heating, Ac, Apprenticeship

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 8 October 2024

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short Q&A podcast, Bryan answers a listener-submitted question about sizing heat pumps for heat load in heating mode, something that we haven't talked much about in the past due to the greater need for cooling in our market.

In most cases across the country, a heat pump's heating loads will be greater than the cooling loads. There is a greater swing between the desired temperature and the actual temperature in heating mode than in cooling mode (in terms of sensible BTUs). We don't want to oversize for cooling because of its lower efficiency, comfort, and humidity control due to the shorter runtimes. (However, oversizing for cooling loads is far less of an issue in arid climates.)

We don't want to oversize the heat pump to meet the heating load when we'll far exceed the cooling load. However, that's not much of a concern for the opposite scenario in which we oversize for heating to meet the cooling load. We can add auxiliary heat, such as electrical heat or natural gas in dual fuel setups, to help us meet the heating load; we don't have those same options in cooling. Variable-capacity systems can also be beneficial in scenarios where heating and cooling loads are massively different.

Bryan is excited about future opportunities for standby cooling and heating capacity, such as in the case of a heat pump heat recovery chiller system with buffer tanks. In the meantime, we have to design for vastly different heating and cooling loads and may have to oversize for one or the other.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The fun hath arrived.

0:05.0

I forgot how to say my name of my own podcast there.

0:10.5

This is the HVAC school podcast.

0:12.0

I'm Brian and this is the

0:13.5

podcast that answers some questions sometimes I guess and today we have a

0:17.8

question from Sophie Ashley. Sophie is really really bright designer in the trade and a carpenter actually by trade.

0:27.0

That's how she got started in construction. I've gotten to know her a little bit through the symposium over the last couple years,

0:32.0

and she has a really great question but before we hear that we want to hear

0:36.4

from our great sponsors who make this whole thing possible.

0:39.6

Refrigeration Technologies at refriggeTech.com and specifically the new Viper Wet rag heat shield

0:46.8

the revolutionary flame-resistant welding pad designed to be used either wet or dry.

0:53.0

Find a Viper wet rag heat shield at a distributor near you

0:56.0

or go to TrueTech Tools.com

0:59.0

and use offer code get schooled for a great discount at check out.

1:02.0

Navac and Navac Global with the

1:04.0

NX1 Nexus Digital Manifold Gauge.

1:08.0

This thing is compatible with over 72 refrigerants,

1:10.0

including the new A2L refrigerants, R32 and R454B.

1:16.0

It has a clear digital display.

1:19.0

It works with its external wireless temperature clamps and micron gauge and integrates with the

1:24.8

my Navac app. Find out more by going to HVACR School.com slash

1:30.4

an X1 fieldpiece. Field Piece.com carrier at carrier.com. All right here's the

...

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