teknikfrog
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2023
- Messages
- 216
It's going to be time to get a new AC unit for my house eventually and I'm trying to make a plan. Right now I have a heat pump from Trane (I've posted a couple threads complaining about it). This will be a DIY install. I'm comfortable doing the work.
I'm interested in deleting the heat pump and installing a simple AC unit. Reasons:
- Much cheaper equipment prices
- Simpler circuitry that will tolerate the poor quality electricity we have here (frequent surges, brownouts, etc)
- Less valves and associated plumbing
- Cheaper replacement parts
- More reliable due to far less solid state and mechanical components
- Less racket. Every heat pump I've seen makes all sorts of godawful noises
This would necessitate me running the heat strips for heat. I do not have gas here, only electric.
How bad of an idea is this? Before you say "very bad", I have a couple mitigating factors:
- I live in a very well insulated log home
- Most of my heat in the winter comes from a woodstove
- I'm in Kentucky and our winters are mostly mild
My intent right now is to shut down my woodstove for a couple days, pull the disconnect on the outside unit, and command my thermostat to run aux heat on 72*. Then after a couple days, pull the data from my Ecobee and do the math; hours on * rated wattage * the kW/h price of electricity here should provide a snapshot of what it would cost to run purely resistance heat. From there I can calculate the "worst case" scenario and see what that does to my bill. My thinking is if the "worst case" means my bill is $600 a month in the winter that is no big deal, but if it's $1100 then that would be a problem.
Is this a dumb idea? Am I missing something? Can heat strips be used for primary heating or are they truly intended for emergencies / severe cold snaps?
I'm interested in deleting the heat pump and installing a simple AC unit. Reasons:
- Much cheaper equipment prices
- Simpler circuitry that will tolerate the poor quality electricity we have here (frequent surges, brownouts, etc)
- Less valves and associated plumbing
- Cheaper replacement parts
- More reliable due to far less solid state and mechanical components
- Less racket. Every heat pump I've seen makes all sorts of godawful noises
This would necessitate me running the heat strips for heat. I do not have gas here, only electric.
How bad of an idea is this? Before you say "very bad", I have a couple mitigating factors:
- I live in a very well insulated log home
- Most of my heat in the winter comes from a woodstove
- I'm in Kentucky and our winters are mostly mild
My intent right now is to shut down my woodstove for a couple days, pull the disconnect on the outside unit, and command my thermostat to run aux heat on 72*. Then after a couple days, pull the data from my Ecobee and do the math; hours on * rated wattage * the kW/h price of electricity here should provide a snapshot of what it would cost to run purely resistance heat. From there I can calculate the "worst case" scenario and see what that does to my bill. My thinking is if the "worst case" means my bill is $600 a month in the winter that is no big deal, but if it's $1100 then that would be a problem.
Is this a dumb idea? Am I missing something? Can heat strips be used for primary heating or are they truly intended for emergencies / severe cold snaps?

