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SteamyTea

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Everything posted by SteamyTea

  1. TL:DR Get them to do a basic heat loss calculation. And have a look at the current bills. Without even basic data, it is hard to recommend anything really. Though A2AHPs are cheap to buy, install and run.
  2. Be personal transport as a service, which is where much of the software world is going. Someone will come along and design an open source system that complies and is repairable.
  3. Evan has been banging on about his heat pump for quite a while, even got told to stop promoting them at one stage. But now he has a show about them. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m002sg1b
  4. They are, but the consequences are high, similar to a car fir. A tumble dryer, generally, is lower consequences i.e. less energy to burn, less spread of flame as they should be vented to outside properly. Then there is the way of extinguishing problem. 20 kWh of batteries may take a few hours. So the risk may be low, but the consequences are high. Risk management is all about the balance.
  5. Me, @Onoff and @Pocster. Trouble is everyone else is too nice to us, so we carry on.
  6. The sound has just gone up two octaves. Was that the sales pitch they used to flog it.
  7. Matthew Syed was talking about this just today. Well worth a listen to his shows, he does not mention ping pong too much. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m002sf4z
  8. You can get non expanding PU adhesives. They will stick almost anything to everything.
  9. I think it is quite reasonable. A lot of these batteries will be charged up over night. Teenagers don't get woken up by a fire alarm (a gentle female voice is best apparently). As @saveasteading says, 2 hours is a cheap fix, may also limit damage to the rest of the building. Look what had happened in Glasgow. Dodgy vape batteries and a major railway station is closed.
  10. https://www.hse.gov.uk/safetybulletins/co-wood-pellets.htm Since 2002 there have been at least nine fatalities in Europe caused by carbon monoxide poisoning following entry into wood pellet storage areas. Although there have not been any incidents so far in the UK the use of wood pellets is increasing and awareness of this danger is required
  11. Only 4.5 kWh/kg. So after conversion, about 1.5 to 2 kWh. So a lot of tonnes.
  12. About 10 TWh/year is turned into electricity. We use about 320 TWh/year. But I like the idea for storage. (Some of the above will be land fill gas)
  13. Cold showers are what you need. ♫Rich man sweatin' in a sauna bath Poor boy scrubbin' in a tub Me, I stay gritty up to my ears Washin' in a bucket of mud♫
  14. Especially if you paid nearly $120/br for oil.
  15. Thinking a bit more about it. Air pressure is what is actually doing the driving, PV/T. Change any one if them, with volume being hard to change, and properties change. This can also be affected by the Venturi effect around the building, which even in a light breeze probably has a greater effect.
  16. A bit about exothermic and endothermic reactions here. https://chem.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Physical_and_Theoretical_Chemistry_Textbook_Maps/Supplemental_Modules_(Physical_and_Theoretical_Chemistry)/Chemical_Bonding/Fundamentals_of_Chemical_Bonding/Bond_Energies
  17. That is what I was questioning. I don't know the answer.
  18. I don't think it needs an extra supply of oxygen as they already have the oxygen chemically bonded in the molecules. This seems to be the problem. Just a look at the chemistry shows the oxygen attached. LiFePO4, Li4Ti5O12 or LiCoO2. When working at normal temperatures, the molecules stay intact, but at elevated temperatures, some of the oxygen can break loose and react with the lithium, which releases energy. Energy is released (generally) when a molecular bond is either formed or broken. Yes, why submerging them gets the temperature down and the reactions slow. Oxygen is not the only gas that aids combustion, try fluorine, it can 'oxidise' oxygen. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_fluoride
  19. I wonder how effective they are when a lithium battery fire starts. Battery fires are generally self sustaining until the fuel runs out, so getting the temperature down is the key element to tackle, a domestic sprinkler system may not deliver enough water, for long enough. Just speculating as I don't know the ins and outs of domestic sprinkler systems. We have a fire suppression system in our works kitchen. It is filled with ANSULEX Low pH Liquid Agent, what ever that is. Sounds like a treatment for piles.
  20. The 'glazing' is multi wall poly carbonate sheets, they go 'milky' after a short time and look dreadful. Do they offer an acrylic option ?
  21. BSI PAS are technical specifications and not laws, or even minimum standards. While I am not saying they should be ignored, and may even be specified within laws, it would be so much easier if Building Act was available to the public free of charge. Though a quick web search did throw up this. https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1984/55/data.pdf https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1986/44/contents https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1989/15/contents https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2022/30/contents So maybe government is getting a bit more open.
  22. Octopus has just put a £75 exit fee in place on new policies. https://moneytothemasses.com/news/octopus-energy-announces-new-exit-fees-due-to-volatile-market
  23. Was there not a couple of Hipsters doing that on Grand Design over a decade ago?
  24. You have not seen the price of cod recently, we stopped selling it a while back. Now this is oil prices, let us see how far the go and for how long. Data is up to March 1st Two charts, nominal price and inflation adjusted for WTI crude. Data from here
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