Here is a way to help the envinoment and lower your bills sumultaneously.
York's has come up with the "Triathlon" natural gas fired heat pump. (I believe it is being studied in Atlanta, GA.) It can replace a forced warm-air furnace and central air conditionng in that it provides heating and cooling.
Why I cant find their own website for it is beyond me...anyway
A natural gas engine spins a compressor (or does it spin a generator that then feeds an electric compressor?) to heat/cool your home with a heat-pump (reverse cycle air-condtioner)
I'm not necessarily a tree-hugger, but I love stuff like this that requires little to no change in life-style & convenience and helps everyone...
Kinda like moving to F/L washers from T/L....
BONUS 1:
In the winter the waste heat released from combustion to spin the motor is also harnessed and used to heat the home. "Free" heat is extracted from the outdoors. It has a 130% efficiency meaning you get more heat energy back than just burning gas alone.... about 45% more heat "free" assuming an average gas burning heater can harness 85% of the heat energy in the gas.
BONUS 2:
Off-peak (summer) use of natural-gas. Reduces the load on our already struggling electrical grid in summer.
And for those consumers located where one company supplies electricity and gas, I'd go negotiate for reduced rates for both gas in summer and electricity in winter (traditional off-peak) and if they won't budge on a rate reduction, I'd try to at least get a rebate of the difference in cost bringing it down to the cost a tradtional heat pump...
York's has come up with the "Triathlon" natural gas fired heat pump. (I believe it is being studied in Atlanta, GA.) It can replace a forced warm-air furnace and central air conditionng in that it provides heating and cooling.
Why I cant find their own website for it is beyond me...anyway
A natural gas engine spins a compressor (or does it spin a generator that then feeds an electric compressor?) to heat/cool your home with a heat-pump (reverse cycle air-condtioner)
I'm not necessarily a tree-hugger, but I love stuff like this that requires little to no change in life-style & convenience and helps everyone...
Kinda like moving to F/L washers from T/L....
BONUS 1:
In the winter the waste heat released from combustion to spin the motor is also harnessed and used to heat the home. "Free" heat is extracted from the outdoors. It has a 130% efficiency meaning you get more heat energy back than just burning gas alone.... about 45% more heat "free" assuming an average gas burning heater can harness 85% of the heat energy in the gas.
BONUS 2:
Off-peak (summer) use of natural-gas. Reduces the load on our already struggling electrical grid in summer.
And for those consumers located where one company supplies electricity and gas, I'd go negotiate for reduced rates for both gas in summer and electricity in winter (traditional off-peak) and if they won't budge on a rate reduction, I'd try to at least get a rebate of the difference in cost bringing it down to the cost a tradtional heat pump...