dooleysm
Platinum Member
Right after college I lived in an apartment that had a heat pump. It had to get a good deal colder than 38 for the backup electric heat to kick on. I'm thinking down in the low 20's. This is according to the light on the thermostat that indicated the backup heat was on. I assume that light wasn't lying.
I have a geothermal heat pump in our house now, and it has to get cold and stay cold for several days for the backup heat to come on. Based on the electric bills, I agree with what the light on the thermostat is telling me.
$160/month for electric in the winter doesn't seem too out of line for a heat pump in a 1600 sq. ft. house to me. Could be other things raising that too, like longer, hotter showers, causing the water heater to work more, reduced daylight causing more electric light usage, etc.
I read up on those programmable thermostats and they weren't really recommended for geothermal. I didn't pay attention to the recommendation for regular heat pumps, but I assume it's the same as geothermal. Heat pumps are good at maintaining temperatures, but not as good at raising them. Since they blow out warm air, as opposed to hot air like a gas furnace, it takes a long time to raise the temperature.
I have a geothermal heat pump in our house now, and it has to get cold and stay cold for several days for the backup heat to come on. Based on the electric bills, I agree with what the light on the thermostat is telling me.
$160/month for electric in the winter doesn't seem too out of line for a heat pump in a 1600 sq. ft. house to me. Could be other things raising that too, like longer, hotter showers, causing the water heater to work more, reduced daylight causing more electric light usage, etc.
I read up on those programmable thermostats and they weren't really recommended for geothermal. I didn't pay attention to the recommendation for regular heat pumps, but I assume it's the same as geothermal. Heat pumps are good at maintaining temperatures, but not as good at raising them. Since they blow out warm air, as opposed to hot air like a gas furnace, it takes a long time to raise the temperature.