Anyone have Geothermal heating systems? If so how are they working out for you? Whats the heat like and what kind of cost per month to run through the winter, I'am in Western Pa so we get some cold winters here. Would you do it again? What might be a ballpark cost to have Geothermal system put in for a average home?
The big cost is the wells or loop field.
Your location will dictate number of wells and depth for X tons of capacity, each. Depth and soil dictates well cost.
Have to have enough property to do a loop field. You have to have enough wells for system capacity.
Heat output temperature will be similar to an air source heat pump. Maybe 100 degrees, thereabouts. Less than fossil fuel heating.
A "geothermal" system as described here is a heat pump that uses ground source water (the wells) as the cooling medium for the refrigerant condenser instead of air. It is not geothermal like heating systems in Iceland.
Big commercial buildings use a similar process. There is a chiller (or chillers) to reject heat and water lines that go to heat pumps from the chiller(s) in the ceiling with ductwork from those.
One big unknown is the long term viability of the wells, including the tubing that is put into them and encased in grout. The well loop tubing used to be advertised as good for 50 years (have not looked recently).
The wells have to be spaced a certain distance apart, so adding more later can be an issue.
The efficiency (COP) numbers are real, as it is a heat pump. But the upfront cost is very high, much higher than a top of the line air source split type heat pump.
There are VRF (variable refrigerant flow) systems that claim to have good cold weather performance.
The common problem is that all of these systems are "bleeding edge" compared to a plain old HVAC system, and there are MANY posts on this forum about hacks with "simple" systems. This equipment has to be sized, installed and maintained properly to even have a hope of getting claimed efficiency numbers. Good luck with that.
The chiller + individual heat pumps is closest to something that is "common", but not in residential stuff.
I would HIGHLY recommend educating yourself, as mentioned by others, BEFORE shopping for bids.
If this is for new construction, I would spend the money on best building practices (air sealing and insulation) before spending the money on very high dollar HVAC equipment and standard building practices.
Honestly, you probably need to hire an engineer (or some other Qualified Person) to design the system and come up with Plans and Specifications to be used to then find a qualified contractor. At least by doing it this way, the bids will be comparable. You may need to find a well contractor and an equipment contractor.