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"Redirect some heat" from where? In the installs I've seen they did it from inside the house i.e. literally cooled the house down. The alternative heat is needed to keep the inside temperature up and work against the pump cooling your house down when it's already cold. Do you have some other alternative source of heat on the modern heat pumps?



"Redirect some heat" from where?

What part of redirect is confusing?

In the installs I've seen they did it from inside the house i.e. literally cooled the house down.

Cooled the house down, or simply warmed it less than would be possible otherwise, assuming that magic prevented freezing of the coils?

I'll take a reduction in efficiency over a complete lack of function.


>What part of redirect is confusing?

Your whole argument is. Heat pumps need a secondary heat source because at the temperatures around 0C they accumulate ice on the heat exchanger outside. To melt the ice they reverse the energy flow so they cool the house and heat that heat exchanger. You asserted that it's just FUD and they can "redirect some heat" instead. This implies they don't cool inside and instead redirect heat from elsewhere (second outside heat exchanger perhaps?).

But it appears there is no second heat exchanger outside and the modern heat pumps work just like heat pumps from couple years ago.

As for keeping the functionality - it's a philosophical question. For me personally, if I turned on the heater because it's cold inside and it started blasting cold air, I'd call the repair people immediately. While it still works in the sense that it makes noise and consumes energy, it stopped performing its function of heating so I'd consider it lost the functionality I am interested in the most.




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