ToughDiamond wrote:
I heard about the water type in the early 1980s for getting cheap hot water. The idea was to put old central heating radiators (painted black) on a house roof to soak up the sun, put water through them, and then the heat pump would suck the heat out of the warmed water and give the user a (smaller volume of) hot water. Said to be quite effective even in England on a cloudy non-summer day I've wanted something of the kind ever since but the city council probably wouldn't like it.
That's not heat pump, that's solar heating.
Sporadically installed in Poland, I saw most of it around Lublin. The black heaters need to be insulated by several layers of air and glass to work in the winter, so it's not much cheaper than solar panels but a lot more costly to install.
Still, in my climate, the main issue is snow.
Heat pump works similarily to a fridge (you notice fridges have hot radiators?), cooling some water, ground or air outside to get over 100% efficiency of heating inside. If you reverse the process (some heat pumps are reversible), you can use it as an air conditioner of regular efficiency with air, or taking some advantage of lower temperatures underground when using ground water.
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Let's not confuse being normal with being mentally healthy.
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