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Save Money by Using Geoexchange to Heat Or Cool Your Home

You may have heard the term before and wondered what it is exactly – in short, a geoexchange heating system has 3 basic components:

  1. Water – (or water and refrigerant-) filled plastic pipes which run through underground trenches in the earth just outside the house. In winter, the Earth's temperature is significantly warmer that the air and the opposite holds true for summer. The system makes use of this renewable energy.
  2. A heat pump or heat exchange unit into which the water from the pipes (as above) run and which extracts heat, discharging it for use in heating the home (this same unit can be operated the opposite way, where cooling for the house is required ). The heat exchange unit works just the same way as a refrigerator or an air conditioner.
  3. Some method of distributing the heat throughout the house: forced-air is a common distribution method, but the most comfortable and efficient means of heating a home is using radiant-floor heating, where a system of tubes filled with heated liquid keep the home at the desired temperature. This method integrates very well with a geoexchange system.

OK then, what is a geothermal system ?

How does a geoexchange ( 'geothermal' ) system save money in heating my home?

Do many people have geoexchange ( 'geothermal ') systems?

Can I have a geoexchange ( 'geothermal ') system installed on my old house?

How much does a geoexchange ( 'geothermal ') system cost and how do I get it?

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