does your econet have a DATS? or just room temp?Not a bad idea, I could do it with a smart switch/zwave to only do it under certain conditions. I do wonder if the Econet will throw an error when it doesn't see the heat rise it wants though.
depends on a lot of things. most are controlled that way (on/off, if you're lucky 2 stage).No, backup heat is so you do not have to rely on a HP when the weather gets too cold. For example, my HP provided heat at -18c but it took an hour to go from 16c to 20c. At -5c that 16c to 20c can happen in 5 minutes. When power is out that means my furnace doesn't work but my gas stove still does work.
HP's work efficiently and mostly constantly. They are most efficient at light loads. They are not like a gas furnace that blasts heat and then shuts off.
an hour for 8F gain seems good to me, especially if it's not using strips to augment.
sometimes power grid going down can take out NG pumping stations, and then whoops!
or the NG pipeline supply has a problem and they ask the whole region to turn the thermostats down! guess you need a wood stove.
if everyone is cooking strips in Alberta when it's -50F out, the grid is going down, lol.Of course and your HP won't work at -45c = -49F which Alberta saw 2 weeks of in January. That is why you need a backup source of heat.
texas made the same mistake.
"just install electric furnaces, you'll never need it!"
Oops! can't heat texas with hairdryers (but you could with heatpumps since the grid is built for 24/7 AC)! guess it's blackout time!
