Mitsubishi MSZ-GE80VA Specifications Page 3

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Superior heating, year round comfort.
How Do Heat Pumps Work?
Mitsubishi Electric Heat Pumps are engineered to provide superior
heating. Heat pumps work in the same way as your refrigerator
except there are two separate parts to the system: An outdoor unit
housing the compressor, which extracts freely available heat energy
from the outside air and transfers or “pumps” it back inside your
home via the indoor unit. The result – you feel warm inside.
Like most other heat pumps, during summer the Mitsubishi Electric
range can be used in reverse to provide cooling. But by focusing
on warmth Mitsubishi Electric Heat Pumps are better at what New
Zealanders want them to do… keep you warm in winter.
Why design to heat?
In the depths of winter, a heat pump designed to cool needs to work
overtime to compensate for the cooler ambient temperatures. That
seriously reduces performance. So we think heating first. The result is
year-round reliability. Winter warmth and a cool home in summer. As too
many people discover, a heat pump designed for cooling can disappoint
when they need it the most, when the temperature drops outside.
Energy Star Partnership
Mitsubishi Electric proudly partners with Energy Star – the global mark
of energy efficiency. Heat pumps that achieve this mark meet strict
energy efficiency guidelines and also have proven heating performance
in cold conditions. The entire Mitsubishi Electric range of High Wall
Heat Pumps achieve the Energy Star Mark.
Indoor Cooling Mode
Outdoor
Indoor Heating Mode Outdoor
Heat Pumps Offer Maximum Efficiency
EECA (Energy Efficiency Conservation Authority) has identified heat
pumps as one of the most energy efficient forms of heating available
in New Zealand. Heat pumps do not create heat; they simply move
available heat from one place to another. The little electrical energy
that is needed is predominantly used to run the compressor.
Typically, 1kW of electrical energy is required to “pump” up to 4kW
of available heat energy from the outside to a specific area inside
the home. In other words, the heat pump transfers a lot more energy
than it uses. With energy efficiencies of up to 400%, heat pumps
are promoted by EECA as one of the most energy efficient forms of
heating available to New Zealanders. This is often represented as COP
(Co-efficient Of Performance), the ratio of kW input to kW output. In
the example above the COP would be 4.
Learn more about ACOP and AEER on page 20.
HEAT ENERGY RECOVERED FROM
OUTDOOR ENVIRONMENT
ELECTRICAL
POWER IN
HEAT ENERGY
OUTPUT
1 kW 4 kW
3
kW
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