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thesilversverker t1_jde368m wrote

They become resistive electric heat around -5/-10.

They work just fine, but costs more. If you hire a joe blow to size and install, and they dont do a schedule J, they might undersize, leading to freeze.

If you've got a cheaper, non-variable $/BTU option, keep it for cold weather. We dont live in the UP tho, they're fine as your primary in maine.

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mainebitch1 t1_jdjbsz8 wrote

Wrong btu output drops massively when you approach the op limits my 36k btu rated to -30 puts out 8k btus at -20.

Try fuckin heating your house @-20 with 8k btus, so many uneducated jackasses in this sub its ridiculous. And i install them for a living

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thesilversverker t1_jdjr3q7 wrote

Why the shit you people talking -30 like it's at all common? Yea, cap drops there, but we might get 8 hours of -30 temps in a decade?

Checked mine - i'm still getting nearly 30k/36k at -15f, the record low point this winter. Which was like maybe 8 hours. Since we expect these temps, any competent installer would size for the realistic scenario.

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mainebitch1 t1_jdklk47 wrote

What kind of an idiot would have back up heat? ^this guy^^^^^^

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