Eokokok
Eokokok t1_jeg69n0 wrote
Reply to comment by netz_pirat in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
Great work done in worst order possible. Since obviously you are proud enough of it to come here with it you won't insulate. So you are still wasting money. And if you insulate your pump will have issues being significantly too big.
So no, you should insulate first either way, unless you have 700 square meters that would justify that energy need or live in Anchorage.
Eokokok t1_jeg5f1f wrote
Reply to comment by AcademicGravy in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
You have no idea how heat pumps work, do you...
I run installation company. I sell heat pumps for a living. I'm certified home and industrial heating/cooling systems technician. And with this intro CO2 pumps suck.
To put it simply - your average 10kW unit can produce that 10kW at output water temp of 35C and outdoor temp of 7C, CO2 lineup is sold with different 'scaling' so to speak, so it might get that 10kW output at 7C outside for water of 70C, but because it's inefficient it won't have COP of 4 but more in the range of 2,4-2,6.
And at -7 your normal pump gets still ~8,5kW of heat output but CO2 will get like 6 or less... And COP nearing standard electric heater. Even for not max output temperature.
Let me say this again and again - if you need a high temp pump you should insulate your building in the first place. Than buy low temp pump. If you don't have money for both you should insulate your building first and not waste time and money for high temp pumps.
So what is presented as great environmental move is just wasting limited resources on marketing gimmick that avoids addressing main issue being outdated building standards for insulation and heating installation.
Eokokok t1_jeg35d6 wrote
Reply to comment by AcademicGravy in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
Most modern, as in currently sold lineups of home range units, systems use R32, which has significantly lower impact than 410a while not being dreadfully inefficient in low temperatures...
So no, switching to CO2 is not really a way to go, it never was, is might be a great idea to sell heat pumps for users that need high temp, but those should not really be using heat pumps in the first place most of the time so yeah, great thing.
Eokokok t1_jefp6rw wrote
Reply to comment by youreblockingmyshot in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
It does not work more efficiently though - it offers higher end of output range but it has pretty bad efficiency cycle overall, specifically bad on low input (outside) temperatures.
No idea why everyone is so excited about those, given most building would benefit more from actually getting more thermo work done and not just changing the energy source in the first place for something that is not particularly efficient in the first place...
Eokokok t1_jdwazb4 wrote
Reply to comment by scottjones608 in Age distribution of passenger cars in Europe [OC] by mrscript_lt
No, most are sold west to collectors and garages for nie than they were with new...
Eokokok t1_jaj1p53 wrote
Reply to comment by Merpninja in Warrants out for arrest of Jalen Carter, ex-Georgia star and NFL draft prospect. by PrincessBananas85
Nvm
Eokokok t1_j9j1hoz wrote
Reply to comment by Funktownajin in The harms of gentrification | The exclusion of poorer people from their own neighbourhoods is not just a social problem but a philosophical one by ADefiniteDescription
Gentrification is issue of the poor, so if you have property in a place that faces skyrocketing land value and decides to stay in such a place being poor for reasons you listed instead of selling it to improve your life it is definition stubborn choices.
It would be ok for everyone, you can stay and be significantly worse of than all your neighbours if it would not include endless outcry about how unjust it is that everyone around you is now better off...
Eokokok t1_j9h8upq wrote
Reply to The harms of gentrification | The exclusion of poorer people from their own neighbourhoods is not just a social problem but a philosophical one by ADefiniteDescription
What is the philosophical question here? If you do not own a property and are driven out by rising rent it does not seem philosophical, it's economical.
If you own a property and stay in place that seems to be getting way out of your income bracket yearly, because of stubbornness or family heirloom sentiments, and not sell to better your life elsewhere it's misguided feelings or lack of personal wealth management skills...
Eokokok t1_j9g0ate wrote
Reply to comment by coinpile in Heat Pumps Sell Like Hotcakes on America's Oil-Rich Frontier by dolphins3
Always good to have tested crew for every complex job done :)
Eokokok t1_j9fz3j5 wrote
Reply to comment by coinpile in Heat Pumps Sell Like Hotcakes on America's Oil-Rich Frontier by dolphins3
Just one thing to keep in mind regarding standing seam systems - do not go for cheapest ones. Actually look for company that will come over and pick the mounting to fit the seam properly. 'Universal' clamps, especially cheap ones, can move under high wind load. Seen installations that needed to be removed completely since they slide down the roof plane...
Eokokok t1_j96b0uc wrote
Reply to [OC] Pie recipes clustered by ingredients by yourmamaman
Wherever this is it makes no sense, presents no data and if just mindbogglingly terrible...
Eokokok t1_j8hjgr0 wrote
Reply to Can 3-D Printing Help Solve the Housing Crisis? - Standard construction can be slow, costly, and inefficient. Machines might do it better. by speckz
No, it can't. Unless you are taking about very specific ground floor only projects. Modern construction materials like AAC are insanely fast, whole walls for a single floor can be done within 2 days, 3rd for preparing the reinforcement for ceiling, 4th day you are done...
Also - walls and ceiling in my house is less than 12% of 'developer' state, meaning all construction and installations done before finishing work can start (floors, furniture, lights and so on). Walls are cheap.
Eokokok t1_j6yviww wrote
Oh noes... Does it at least have good battery, or maybe decent anthena? Or is it as big garbage as S22?
Eokokok t1_j6jxgm4 wrote
Reply to Private UBI by SantoshiEspada
How you managed to start off with 3 falsehoods in a row is really impressive...
Eokokok t1_j1livg1 wrote
Reply to comment by Schemen123 in New Nio 500 kW ultra-fast Power Charger 3.0 can charge a car from 10-80% in only 12 minutes by Surur
You compare a whole company to needs of handful of chargers? You do not get how insane this is? As a low-mid voltage certified electrician let me tell you - it is mental.
Eokokok t1_j1lij2a wrote
Reply to comment by Schemen123 in New Nio 500 kW ultra-fast Power Charger 3.0 can charge a car from 10-80% in only 12 minutes by Surur
500 per single station is not? Sure.
Eokokok t1_j1lihz3 wrote
Reply to comment by Schemen123 in New Nio 500 kW ultra-fast Power Charger 3.0 can charge a car from 10-80% in only 12 minutes by Surur
Convenience. Places where you can create new mid voltage lines from main station and places where people go in mass will rarely coincide.
Eokokok t1_j1k8sl3 wrote
Reply to New Nio 500 kW ultra-fast Power Charger 3.0 can charge a car from 10-80% in only 12 minutes by Surur
I wonder if people do not see the 500 kW as an issue or believe it will be magically resolved even though most places have problems even with normal homes and their needs...
Eokokok t1_j1327xm wrote
Reply to comment by aught4naught in Why didn't the US adopt the STG-44 after WW2? by TurboTortois3
And yet we are back at big bullets with next gen rifle going into production.
Eokokok t1_j0v0e8l wrote
Reply to comment by pihb666 in The IEA says humanity used the greatest amount of coal in 2022 in all of human history, and that this level of consumption will continue until at least 2025. One-third of all global coal goes to generate electricity in China, and India's coal use is growing at 6% per annum. by lughnasadh
They have too many people? By metric of the amount of whine on Reddit maybe? Or what actual metric you use here, really interested in that.
Eokokok t1_j0ugobd wrote
Reply to comment by pihb666 in The IEA says humanity used the greatest amount of coal in 2022 in all of human history, and that this level of consumption will continue until at least 2025. One-third of all global coal goes to generate electricity in China, and India's coal use is growing at 6% per annum. by lughnasadh
If you propose depopulation there is a start for that...
If you cannot even be bothered to read up on one child policy and while it failed miserably we are back at insanely stupid comment part.
Eokokok t1_j0udygn wrote
Reply to comment by pihb666 in The IEA says humanity used the greatest amount of coal in 2022 in all of human history, and that this level of consumption will continue until at least 2025. One-third of all global coal goes to generate electricity in China, and India's coal use is growing at 6% per annum. by lughnasadh
This comment is so out of touch with reality it hurts...
Eokokok t1_iywxn4n wrote
Reply to comment by MiBWH in [OC] on the way back from work by phobox91
As an e39 fanatic and owner this looks like one. The big stupid shady thingy does not stand a chance.
Eokokok t1_iwlvm3q wrote
Reply to comment by cox_ph in 2022 World Cup Rosters and Player Club Locations [OC] by BoMcCready
Where would you go to play the game if not with most overpayed league.
Eokokok t1_jegawli wrote
Reply to comment by AcademicGravy in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
CO2 is better than other things GWP-wise, true, but it has no place in home installations given everything about it.
There is one place where it makes sense, system which accounts for probably most lost refrigerants while not caring about efficiency that much - car AC/pumps. And guess where they not actually use it forcing proprietary garbage 1234f...
So if CO2 is to be pushed for environmental reasons it should be used were power and efficiency is less of an issue than leaks, but hey, it's never about environment in the first place is it...