Does your fridge use lava?
Posted: March 17th, 2019, 11:55 am
Hah! With the recent publicity about phasing out gas boilers in new homes and using things like heat pumps for domestic heating there is a whole new opportunity to recall that journalists are not the people who did science at school!
More than one source is struggling to 'explanarise' the mysterious workings of 'heat pumps'. This includes the BBC website, also recently on the BBC R4's Money Box: "It comes from lava or something like that, doesn't it?". And I just spotted another struggling journo on This is Money:
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/bil ... arden.html
"This fluid flows into a heat pump, which uses clever technology to heat water for the home. Crucially, the device squeezes the energy out of a very large amount of tepid liquid and uses it to heat up a much smaller amount of water."
So far so good, but:
"It does this by a process called compression. Hot water is then fed to a tank and around the home’s pipes and radiators."
When will the penny drop that every home already has a 'heat pump', I call mine a refrigerator. Should be easier from then on.
More than one source is struggling to 'explanarise' the mysterious workings of 'heat pumps'. This includes the BBC website, also recently on the BBC R4's Money Box: "It comes from lava or something like that, doesn't it?". And I just spotted another struggling journo on This is Money:
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/bil ... arden.html
"This fluid flows into a heat pump, which uses clever technology to heat water for the home. Crucially, the device squeezes the energy out of a very large amount of tepid liquid and uses it to heat up a much smaller amount of water."
So far so good, but:
"It does this by a process called compression. Hot water is then fed to a tank and around the home’s pipes and radiators."
When will the penny drop that every home already has a 'heat pump', I call mine a refrigerator. Should be easier from then on.