Every H/P I've worked on, when you put it in "emergency heat" mode, the fan ran continuous. In "auxiliary heat" mode, both the heat pump and heat strips run. In both cases, the H/P will use more juice then a stand alone electric furnace.
Thats different from my experence with them. On all the HP t-stats I've worked on emer. heat by-passes the first stage heat and runs second stage as the primary heat
I was talking about a heat pump running as a heat pump. A heat pump running a gas furnace back up isn't running in heat pump mode when the furnace is on, and is only as efficient as the gas furnace. Any real savings there?
No savings after the furnace comes on, but you save up to that point, therefore electric backup is the better choice.
I lived in south east Ohio(Athens) which is just about West Virginia. Our heat pumps ran in Aux. mode for probably 1/2 the winter. We had no direct apples/apples comparisons, but the apartments with the heat pumps had higher electric bills in the winter.(side note: a heat pump burns out in the winter, no one notices. The auxiliary heater quits, and we would get a service call.
If your HP runs only 1/2 the winter it is more efficient than electric heat. So wouldn't it save money?
I'm probably biased,(OK, I'm biased, I don't care) but I wouldn't have a heat pump as a primary heat source anywhere the average temp stayed below 35 deg. on a regular basis. If I was somehow stuck with one, I,d get a full sized gas or electric furnace, then I'd wire it with an outside thermostat so that when the temp dropped below about 40, the "auxiliary" furnace switched over to the primary, and the heat pump stayed off.
That's one way to do it. I prefer staging in electric heat along with it.
RNMedic: If you decide to get one, and are in their service area, AEP used to subsidize the cost of a heat pump. They'd cut you a check for the difference between a regular AC unit and a heat pump. 'Don't know if the program is still available. 'Might want to check your elec. co. May be a similar program available.