gogreen
 New Member
 Posts:2
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| 21 May 2008 06:03 PM |
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Is anybody familiar with Earth to Air LLC company? They are a newer company but I cant seem to locate a DX installer for the more familiar ECR Tech in my area (north central PA). TIA
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tuffluckdriller
 Advanced Member
 Posts:630

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| 21 May 2008 11:22 PM |
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You can call EarthLinked yourself for their dealer near you. Their number is 1-866-211-6102. EarthLinked recently changed its name from ECR Technologies, Inc. to EarthLinked Technologies, Inc. This was to stop confusion between them and another ECR Industries.
EarthLinked is a very good product. If you don't want to call them to find a dealer, I'll find one for you. Just let me know.
As for Earth to Air, please read my post in another thread about them: http://greenbuildingtalk.com/Forums/tabid/53/forumid/13/postid/34354/view/topic/Default.aspx |
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| Clark Timothy ([email protected])<br>Geothermal Heat Pumps: Heating and Cooling that's Dirt Cheap!<br>www.pinksgeothermal.com |
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tuffluckdriller
 Advanced Member
 Posts:630

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| 22 May 2008 02:09 PM |
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Hopefully this guy's close to you. He's in Lawrenceville, PA.
It's Bing Hughes with Advanced Air. Phone is 866-423-8247.
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| Clark Timothy ([email protected])<br>Geothermal Heat Pumps: Heating and Cooling that's Dirt Cheap!<br>www.pinksgeothermal.com |
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gary prior
 New Member
 Posts:1
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| 27 May 2008 09:51 PM |
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Living in CT, and looking to have a DX geothermal system put in for heating, cooling and hot water. I believe in the system but I can't find anyone that has had problems or the down side of a geothermal heating system. I need to know what to expect on the down side. Does anyone have any feedback |
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tuffluckdriller
 Advanced Member
 Posts:630

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| 28 May 2008 12:03 AM |
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I'm sitting here contemplating your question. I'm not seeming to be able to think of a downside.
About all I can come up with is the downside of it being installed incorrectly. Call EarthLinked Technologies, Inc. and ask who's the dealer near you.
I guess one other downside--and it's only a temporary one--could be that it can tear up your yard a little for a time. But yards can be put back together somewhat easily. Especially when you get all the benefits of geothermal in your home.
Another temporary one could be the up front cost. But really, what else are you going to put in your home that pays you back as much as a geothermal system? Along with giving you the ultimate comfort!
Where in CT do you live? |
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| Clark Timothy ([email protected])<br>Geothermal Heat Pumps: Heating and Cooling that's Dirt Cheap!<br>www.pinksgeothermal.com |
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cnygeo
 Basic Member
 Posts:170
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| 28 May 2008 12:28 AM |
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Brainstorming some potential downsides: -biggest one in CT is probably cost of electricity - in New England there are areas where you need a COP of 5 or even 6 to beat natural gas, though gas isn't available everywhere. Make sure you get an accurate analysis of relative operating cost with current energy prices. -in the event of a power failure you will need a _big_ generator (I could run my old oil burner off a car battery and inverter, my heat pump would need a 10kW generator) -disturbance to ground, though it can be a good excuse for new landscaping -electric service might need upgrading (primarily only an issue in old houses) -people constantly bugging you to see your system and explain how it works
These are all pretty minor - the bottom line is if the economics work out and you can hook up with a good installer, there's no reason not to do it.
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