Bosch 18 SEER Heat Pump 🆚 The Daikin Fit | 2024 Review 🔥

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  • Опубликовано: 11 апр 2024
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Комментарии • 24

  • @richardsmith4187
    @richardsmith4187 Месяц назад

    Love my Daikin Fit system installed in February and look forward to many years of carefree service as I have the 12 year service/parts warranty. The 3,200 tax credit and rebate was also a plus. The system is whisper quiet inside and outside and control is easy from the thermostat or the app on my cell phone from the cloud. Daikin is awesome and worth checking out.

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  24 дня назад +1

      Right on thanks for the testimonial, I agree we love the Fit super quiet, from comfort perspective it’s the best

  • @stevemcfarland4661
    @stevemcfarland4661 Месяц назад +1

    I have a Mitsubishi mini split system that's going on 11 years old and while it works great and is inverter, its min level is still sometimes too high. Days where the temp swings a lot it can overheat the house for a while. Also on the thermostats, none of them seem to integrate with a boiler. Would be great to have the heat pump work in 30 plus temps and let the boiler take over when it's really cold.

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад +1

      The Mitsubishis will work in colder than 30 temps, does it not have a thermostatic control that shuts off based on temperature? Normally it should shut off when it hits set point so you don’t overheat

    • @stevemcfarland4661
      @stevemcfarland4661 Месяц назад

      @@TheHVACDopeShow I know they will work, but are less efficient than my boiler.

  • @coryr6359
    @coryr6359 20 дней назад

    Hi. Please simplify my life and tell me which specific brand and unit of heat pump i should buy for my house in alberta canada.. lol.. I have about 1300sqft main floor plus basement. I have solar. I think id like a ductless system for the sake of ease of install. You have some of the most informative content out there, so thank you thank you thank you

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  20 дней назад +1

      Mini split will still require backup heat I wish I had an easy answer lol but in Alberta it’s cold so even the lowest temp cold climate heat pumps like the GREE will still require a backup. You have access to more heat pumps in Canada like air to water monoblock but they’re more expensive. I think if you’re going the cold climate mini split route just make sure you have some sort of backup heat besides that to supplement for the coldest nights. Even if it’s just pellet stove it will help it keep up when it gets below -10F (-23C)

    • @coryr6359
      @coryr6359 19 дней назад

      @@TheHVACDopeShow Thank you very much for the response. yes we currently have a nat gas high efficient furnace. we are trying to minimize the amount of nat gas consumption, as we have solar. 👍The only reason i wanted the minisplit is because i am more comfortable (as a plumber) installing that vs tying it into the central heating system. . . maybe thats a mistake on my part.

  • @jamram9924
    @jamram9924 Месяц назад

    I realize that Daikin purchased Goodman, but in my shopping for a mini split unit, I chose Mitsubishi due to their availability, price, parts and service in my area. Trane/Amercian Standard joined forces with Mitsubishi for a reason, quality and dependability. Daikin moved their production from Asia (I believe it was Taiwan) to Texas. Sadly, their quality dropped and had too many issues. I hope Daikin quality control has improved since Japanese are infamous for the quality and quickly correcting errors in their production processes (I say this from working in wholesale automotive parts for corporations like Aisin, Denso, etc). Thanks for the great video.....

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад

      Thanks for sharing! I haven’t had this experience with Daikin but Mitsubishi is a great brand can’t go wrong there, glad you enjoyed the video 😁

    • @jamram9924
      @jamram9924 Месяц назад

      @@TheHVACDopeShow Perhaps in typical Japanese fashion, they rectified this matter. I see this on the automotive side with Toyota/Lexus. Thanks for the post.

  • @ryanbrown9940
    @ryanbrown9940 Месяц назад +4

    Also Daikin FIT enhanced also outperforms this system. Not sure why you used the FIT E in the Bosche 15 seer amd the standard FIT as compared to the 18 seer. EER is also a terrible measurement for efficiency when looking at inverters.

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад

      I didn’t use the standard fit I used the same enhanced fit in this 18 SEER match up? Not sure what you’re referencing… I agree EER has nothing to do with efficiency in an inverter but the local utilities Xcel requires this for their rebates and the Denver Climate Action rebate, fortunately Phoenix (SRP) doesn’t. So Bosch qualifies for a lot of those rebates that the Fit Enhanced does not qualify for which is really why we started offering these as an option… I don’t care one way or another but we had several jobs where customers were choosing Bosch over the Fit from a competitor and we were tired of not having an alternate option when someone wanted something that qualified for those rebates, and the Bosch was competitively priced for it.

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад

      I’m watching the video again you might be right if that’s the case I’ll update and pin a comment but I used the same one in the 15 seer matchup so it would be wrong in both

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад

      You’re right I did the regular fit but looking in the manual the on page 31 it shows lower performance by the Daikin Fit Enhanced. 47F cop is 3.3 although the 5F cop is still 2.00 across the board 2-4 tons… capacity keeps up longer though.

  • @jasonbroom7147
    @jasonbroom7147 Месяц назад

    If you are running a heat pump that uses an inverter, does this essentially mean it has a built-in "soft start" design that won't put as much of a demand on an off-grid solar/inverter system?

    • @johnwhite2576
      @johnwhite2576 Месяц назад

      I believe that’s correct. But will await answer. This question came up for me when considering adding a compressor defender. Also NB these federal tax rebates dotn apply to new builds !

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад +1

      Yes but it’s a step up from a soft start kit. A soft start kit just has a starting capacitor that essentially stores the initial inrush current so when the AC first kicks on the starting amp draw is lower. However an inverter has a massive amount of capacitors on the inverter board and because it’s ramping up in small increments the difference in starting amp draw is massive even compared to a soft start. For example I could run a 5 ton inverter heat pump / AC on a smaller 6000 watt generator if needed because starting amp draw is 2-3 amps instead of 20-30. And when it’s ramping up if it’s not for the full load it will stay at a lower capacity.

    • @jasonbroom7147
      @jasonbroom7147 Месяц назад

      @@TheHVACDopeShow - This would make the EG4 6000XP (or maybe a pair of them) suitable for running a heat pump with an inverter, whereas a standard heat pump could present a problem. Are there any ductless units with an inverter?

  • @ryanbrown9940
    @ryanbrown9940 Месяц назад +3

    This system’s indoor doesn’t modulate and match the outdoor. If you are looking for true comfort buy a Daikin FIT

    • @johnwhite2576
      @johnwhite2576 Месяц назад

      Very very important point. Bosch makes sense in dry climates ; but where you have humidity, and esp trunk seasons where humidity high but sensible not, they really suck. Latent heat removal is a huge issue for very large part of the country esp when you consider population involved- southeast mid Atlantic and much of Midwest Ohio Illinois, Missouri, etc.

    • @TheHVACDopeShow
      @TheHVACDopeShow  Месяц назад

      I agree from a comfort perspective… you just have to understand some people don’t care, and they either more price sensitive and/or want a bunch of rebates from the city and they ask “if the Fit is better then why doesn’t it hit these rebates?” And me responding with “The EER isn’t high enough but the Fit is still better because of x y z” doesn’t always make a strong case. Also a lot of people don’t like the Daikin One. I don’t mind it I honestly don’t care that much for an hvac guy I manually adjust things when I’m too hot or too cold so I’m not trying to set it and forget it. But some people still have gone with these over the fit just because of thermostat flexibility to keep using there ecobee and room sensors. I think if Daikin added a room sensor option to the Daikin one that would narrow the gap but I’m just the messenger, this is what I’m hearing from customers I really don’t care one way or the other. Free market means giving customers what they want and giving them options.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Месяц назад

      @@johnwhite2576 The Bosch (Midea) units have a few DIP switches which change the performance algorithm. Adjusting these should improve comfort in humid areas.