I'm in sunny humid Florida and have had great luck with air source heat pump water heaters, particularly the GE models.
80+% of water heaters here are in garages, so HPWH work well.
Now I'm faced with a client with a completely detached garage, and their water heater is in a big master walk in closet. I don't dare go with a GE HPWH owing to concern that the Master WIC would get mighty chilly immediately after bathing, particularly during cooler weather.
I have read that the Air Generate units can have their exhaust ducted, which would allow a WIC install.
Does anyone have any firsthand or solid hearsay experience with AirGenerate?
Do they work well?
Any early failures
noise?
Thanks!
Curt
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Permalink Reply by Dan Wildenhaus on November 14, 2012 at 1:34pm Curt-
We are running the Heat Pump Water Heater study in the Pacific NW (Smart Water Heat program) and have experience with both non-ducted and ducted HPWHs. We typically refer to them as Tier 1 and Tier 2 units (Tier 2 being the ducted model).
To date we have installed 30 AirGenerate ducted units. By and large, the homeowners have been very positive about the new unit. So far, homeowners comment that they are not having issues with running out of hot water (likely due to the fact that this unit is 66 gallons and not 40 or 50 that they may have had before). We have also had positive reactions to the design and functionality of the units and early feedback of reduced bills. We will have more information on the billing data later in the program.
There have been a few negatives that we have learned along the way.
We also recommend providing contractors and homeowners with best practice/information guides. You can find them here:
http://smartwaterheat.org/sites/default/files/Smart_Water_Heat_Best...
http://smartwaterheat.org/sites/default/files/Smart_Water_Heat_Home...
I hope this is all helpful!
Cheers,
Dan Wildenhaus
Sr Building Scientist
Fluid
503.808.9003 | fluidms.com
We change the way people use energy
Permalink Reply by John C. Semmelhack on November 16, 2012 at 10:49am Dan,
Have you measured the drop in efficiency/capacity caused by reducing the airflow?
Why are you recommending exhausting the discharge outside of the house?
John
Permalink Reply by Dan Wildenhaus on November 16, 2012 at 12:54pm John-
One of our field studies is currently evaluating the performance with the CAR in only. Another project will be running them for several months without the CAR and then several months with for just this reason.
Since we are in a heating dominated climate, the energy and comfort penalty associated with addressing the cold exhaust makes venting to the exterior almost mandatory,
Our recommendations are for the "Northern Climate".
Dan
Permalink Reply by Curt Kinder on November 17, 2012 at 6:29am Great Info - thanks so much!
48 db is less than the 55db level specified for GE, and those are quiet enough for a garage or utility room but not anywhere near a bedroom. Are there any AirGenerate installs fairly near noise-sensitive rooms (living / family / sleeping?)
Did either homeowner reporting vibration have the HPWH on a concrete slab?
Have you measured delta-T on the airside? I would expect that to rise when you regulate the airflow from 500 down to 270, along with a slight drop in COP, although throttling airflow probably causes blower to unload by a tenth of an amp or so, maybe more.
500 CFM strikes me as very high, given that the GE and Geyser operate at 100 CFM or so (guesstimate). AO Smith seem to operate around 200-300 CFM (another guesstimate)
Given that the AirGenerate moves quite a bit more air AND at much higher static pressure (as required for ductability) I infer that AirGenerate blower power must be substantially higher than the GE and may well represent a significant fraction of total system power. That's an interesting tradeoff. Do you have compressor and blower wattage data?
I'm intrigued by the possibilities of ducting HPWH, since it opens up a wider range of install locations AND has the additional benefit of providing useful cooling and dehu in my hot humid climate.
However, I'm having trouble accepting the benefit of ducting HPWH exhaust outdoors, considering the house as a system in ANY climate. Aside from the obvious issues of depressurization and backdrafting, the thermodynamics don't work for me:
Setting humidity / enthalpy aside to keep this simple...suppose (pending data) the AirGenerate airside delta T is 15*F dry bulb. For discussion's sake, the unit is installed within conditioned space in a home with a heating set point of 70. If the unit takes in 270, 400 or 600 CFM of 70*F air, cools it to 55*F and blows it outside, that exahust air flow will be made up, whether actively or passively, from outdoors. That seems to be a losing proposition for the homeowner anytime outside air temperature is below 55*F, which is pretty much all of the time during heating season in northern climates.
While I know that heating degree days are figured on average outdoor temp of 65*F, I strongly suspect that a combination of tighter homes, internal gains, solar gains and thrift results in very few folks reaching for the thermostat until outdoor temps are at 55 or less.
In other words, exhausting air at 55*F and replacing it with outdoor air at 54 or less is a net loser, getting progressively worse as heating season deepens. At the point in the season where water falls from the sky pre-frozen and then persists in that state on the ground (that anyone tolerates that for more than a few days is truly bizarre to Floridians, but I digress...), humidity becomes a concern, since subfreezing outdoor air is uncomfortably dry when heated to 70.
While there has been quite a bit of concern and criticism of HPWH in northern climates owing to the heating season heating penalty, dumping the exhaust outdoors would seem to exacerbate the penalty. With AirGenerate's high air flows, I suspect the airside delta-T is closer to 10*F, worsening matters.
If one could supply the unit with outside air only, that would deal with the heating penalty and depressurization concerns, but COP and recovery would plummet during cold weather, and frosting / icing / sweating of ductwork would have to be very carefully managed.
Perhaps an option would be to equip HPWH with an outdoor temperature sensor and have a setup menu option to switch the unit to resistance heating at a selected outdoor temperature, and Best Practices would recommend a range of settings for that switchover based on individual circumstances. (install room volume, type and operating cost of space heat)
I plan to dump exhaust into home's return air ductwork, spreading any undesirable cooling effect so thinly as to escape concern and enjoy bonus cooling and dehu 8+ months per year.
FWIW, when my fireplace is inactive, operating either the range hood (~200 CFM) or the clothes dryer pulls the odor of woodsmoke into home. Our house leaks 1600CFM50 or about 2.5ACH50.
Please keep the data coming!
Permalink Reply by John C. Semmelhack on November 20, 2012 at 8:41am Dan,
Good to hear you're evaluating the reduced airflow form the CAR's. I'm interested to see the results.
Regarding the discharge airflow - comfort issues are relatively easy to mitigate with location, placement and type of supply grille.
Regarding energy penalty - as Curt says above, it depends on the difference between the discharge air temperature and the outdoor temperature. I don't know what the average discharge temperature for the AirTap units is for a typical water heating cycle, but I suspect it's somewhere around 50-55F. If the average outside air temperature during a water heating cycle is lower than the average discharge temperature, then you're creating an energy penalty by exhausting the discharge air to the outside.
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