Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you have a heat pump, especially an older one or one that is not designed for very cold weather, you should switch to emergency heat until the temperatures come back to normal. Emergency heat uses a lot of electricity (if it is the electric kind) but probably less than a heat pump that runs 24/7 and still can't heat the house.
This is not good advice.
Its spot on actually and the reason why emergency/supplemental heat was included with them. You just need to remember to switch them back over when the temperature get back up to 30.
The OP said: "Emergency heat uses a lot of electricity (if it is the electric kind) but probably less than a heat pump that runs 24/7 and still can't heat the house."
This is just false. The efficiency of a heat pump is unrelated to whether it is properly sized. In the DC climate even in the coldest weather heat pumps are going to be more efficient than resistive heating. If your heat pump is undersized, you want to let it do its job and supplement it with supplemental heat, not replace it with emergency heat.