It'll start immediately, but to due to the large volume of water it will be awhile before you sense it.
Usually a backup heating unit. For instance in a heat pump when the temperature drops below the temperature where the heat pump cannot extract heat from the existing air electric heating elements kick in.
I am no heat pump expert, but whatever you do, DO NOT buy a suretemp pool heating pump, as they stop working under 65 degrees. Their web site and literature state 45 degrees, but that is not the truth. I have called them about my new pool heater and they say there is nothing they can do.
Usually, you will notice diminished heating capacity from your system, and the out side temperature is dropping below the average temperature your heat-pump operates at. This is the time to activate your emergency heat.
The heating capacity of an air-to-air heat pump decreases as the outside air temperature drops. This is because the efficiency of heat transfer decreases as the temperature differential between the outside air and desired indoor temperature increases. As a result, the heat pump has to work harder to extract heat from the outside air, leading to a decrease in heating capacity.
The purpose of a swimming pool heat pump is to rise the temperature of the water. The pool then can be used for swimming even on days when the weather is not perfect. The swimming pool season is extended.
A heat pump is a heating system that applies the principle of refrigeraation to heating homes. These principles are: 1. when a gas is quickly compressed, it's temperature rises; 2. when a gas is allowed to expand suddenly it's temperature fallls; 3. when a liquid evaporates, it absorbs heat; and 4. when a gas condenses it releases heat.
It works this way. Even if you could set the thermostat at 200 it will not heat the water any quicker. It sounds as if you have an undersized heater. A larger heater will heat the water faster if your system can upgrade to the larger size heater. Your house will not heat up any faster if you set the thermostat to maximum. It is the output capacity of the heater that determines how fast it will heat. What dictates heater size is: the size of the gas line. the length of the gas line run from the meter to the heater. the size of the meter. how many GPM the pump is producing. the GPM capacity of the filter. the size of the plumbing in you pool ~ 1.5"; 2"; 3" total gallons in the pool. are among a few. Just common sense here...... k
A heat pump is a device that transfers heat energy from one place to another, typically using electricity. It can both heat and cool a space by extracting heat from the air or ground outside and transferring it inside (for heating) or vice versa (for cooling), making it an energy-efficient heating and cooling solution.
solar heating for pools is very efficient, it heats the pool with a natural resource that comes to us for free, and the only bill you will get is for the pump to circulate the water, but the pump is already going as it cleans the pool anyways.
A room heat pump provides efficient heating and cooling in a residential setting, offering benefits such as energy savings, consistent temperature control, and improved indoor air quality.
Hi there, This depends on how often you use the pool. If you are in it every day then maintaining the temperature is best but if you only hop in on the weekend then heating the pool as required will be best. This is assuming you use a gas heater or heat pump of course - a solar system will just run constantly. Using a pool cover will help enormously. Most heat loss is due to evaporation and a pool cover can cut this loss right back. In fact, using a pool cover will drop the cost of maintaining pool temperature by about 70-80%. Hope this helps. Try http://poolheaterguide.com for more information. Cheers, Brian.
what controls the heat pump to determine whether it is in the heating cycle or cooling cycle