Context: I am not a fridgy, I work with electronics. I would love to answer my question by tearing open a dozen different aircon units, but I’m sorely lacking in that department.

Question: Are there some optional components or fancier materials that are simply too expensive to use in the lower end aircons; but are used in the higher efficiency expensive units? The range of COP/EER I see advertised is wild, from 2 to 6 or so.

I already vaguely understand that these things help efficiency:

  • Bigger indoor & outdoor coils with more metal in them (working fluids get returned hotter/colder gives better carnot efficiency)
  • Operating compressor at its optimal power level (I believe they have an efficiency vs power curve with a single peak, so it’s better to use a bigger compressor if you need more power output)
  • Inverter control instead of on/off control (most situations, but technically some use cases will have them on par)
  • Choice of refrigerant (but that seems to be controlled in my market, I have not seen many options)

Is there anything else they change? Or is that most of the difference?

  • WaterWaiverOP
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    15 hours ago

    heat pumps instead of traditional compressor based ac systems

    Heat pumps are compressor based systems. They are the same technology.

    In addition to advances in fin design and compressor and motor efficiency and materials

    This reads lot like an answer from an LLM. Did you use one? My apologies if not, but you sound very suspicious.

    • bizarroland@fedia.io
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      12 hours ago

      No I didn’t use an llm and yes a heat pump does use a condenser or a compressor but it’s not the same as a Freon based compressor system.

      Yes, heat pumps use probably a Freon based refrigerant but they operate in a slightly different manner.