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Everything posted by SteamyTea
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My Heat Pump Experience 2022-2024
SteamyTea replied to Green Power's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
@Green Power From your blog "You may be told by a professional installer that your house isn’t suitable for a heat pump." How true, had an electrical technician tell me that a heat pump would not work in my house as I have wooden windows. Obviously a man that fell asleep during the classes about conductivity and resistance. Probably why we was swapping meters and not wiring houses. -
My Heat Pump Experience 2022-2024
SteamyTea replied to Green Power's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Bit in the Guardian about how the UK could produce more RE electricity with only a small impact on land area. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/apr/09/england-could-produce-13-times-more-renewable-energy-using-less-than-3-of-land-analysis What is so annoying is that I was at Exeter University a decade and a half ago and we had already worked this out. Did I hear on the radio that we have broken monthly temperature records for the last ten month? Now I know some of that is because we are in an El Nino period and next year we will probably not break so many records, but if you every talk to someone what is complaining about the rain, ask what they are doing about it. -
Many years ago I stumbled upon Barnsdale Gardens, it is where Geoff Hamilton had his TV studio set for Gardener's World. What amazed me was how small each set was, and how different they where. Should be possible to combine a few. Well worth a visit if you want to go Rutland way. Failing that, get a book for inspiration.
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I have seen primary reasons somewhere, so you may need to hunt around a bit. Some of that can be attributed to lower smoking rates and fire resistant furniture (was in the 1980's that the legislation came in, so most of that furniture is now discarded).
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Well worth a listen to this old broadcast. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b007ycdl
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Probably worth looking here.
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Improving living conditions in my mum's damp and humid small bungalow
SteamyTea replied to minty's topic in Ventilation
Except when it is hotter and higher humidity. -
12V batteries for Loxone Power Supply and Backup
SteamyTea replied to Thorfun's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
Can you install 'emergency' lighting. Say a 3W bulb somewhere suitable and a small changeover switch. -
Improving living conditions in my mum's damp and humid small bungalow
SteamyTea replied to minty's topic in Ventilation
What temperature does your mother keep her place at? The relationship between temperature, humidity and mould growth is not linear. Adding external insulation will help in using less energy to keep the temperature higher than the outside air temperature, but in itself, does not change the amount of water vapour in the internal air. To change that you need to ventilate. You can get single room mechanical ventilation and heat recovery units (dMVHR) and it may be worth fitting one of these before you try anything else. While you think there may not be any water leaks, you may need to investigate this more i.e. waste water pipes, clothes drying, ground height. -
The water treatment is probably most of that.
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Just started a self-build in Dorset. Exciting times!
SteamyTea replied to NailBiter's topic in Introduce Yourself
"Our assessment of the quality of new evidence is biased by our previous beliefs." Dr Ben Goldacre, Bad Science, 2008. (His mother, Noosha Fox, is interesting as well) -
Using a diamond core drill. any advice?
SteamyTea replied to saveasteading's topic in Tools & Equipment
Then let if overheat. Back in '86, I did some composite plastic samples for material testing. One of those samples was purposely made incorrectly (way to much hardener). Popped them on the testing machines (tensile, compression, bending and vibration) and watched them explode. The one that was purposely wrong failed very early, except for the hardness testing, it was way harder than the others, which accounts for the spectacular failure of the other tests. (I did my apprenticeship in a company that made testing machines) -
How well does it pick up bodies that are greased up and bound?
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Using a diamond core drill. any advice?
SteamyTea replied to saveasteading's topic in Tools & Equipment
There are lots of material properties to take into account. Concrete buildings never used to be much good in an earthquake, they are now though. Main thing was, if I have my arithmetic right, is that concrete is not as bad as a lot of people think. It has one big advantage over timber in that it can be cast into complicated shapes with very little waste. -
Using a diamond core drill. any advice?
SteamyTea replied to saveasteading's topic in Tools & Equipment
Is it. At around £100/m3 delivered it must been one of the cheapest materials there is. You can buy standing timber, with the bark, at around £55/m3. Once planed to size and stacked in Travis Perkins, it becomes about £2300/m3. I am adding to this, as I am a bit bored this morning. The embodied energy in concrete is around 2500 MJ/m3 (700 kWh), timber is 5100 MJ/m3 (1420 kWh), the embodied carbon is 360 kg/m3 and timber is 280 kg/m3. Food for thought that is. https://theconstructor.org/sustainability/embodied-energy-building-materials/567108/ -
Depends, the posters used to be good.
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How much is caused by all the electric motors, and brakes, on the trains? Also, if the average OAT goes up, the thermal losses will go down. That should be easy enough to check. One of the few towns that is a similar latitude as London. But. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/okotoks-drake-landing-solar-energy-repairs-future-1.7148389
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Thermal Inertia or Thermal Diffusivity if you please.
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You can store some energy thermally via resistance heating, that is cheap and cheerful. Did you find out if your ASHP buffer can take an immersion heater? Or plumb in a Willis heater to the UFH. The biggest problem with PV is that on ordinary days, the output is quite variable because of clouds passing overhead. That makes grabbing the energy a bit tricky if you want to reduce your imports. That is why resistance heating is useful, it can react quite quickly. Running a washing machine is not really a stop/start process, cooking is the same. It is possible to modify a freezer to start up and over cook when running on PV, but that runs the risk of over cycling the compressor, and these days, freezer use very little power anyway. So I would just divert, via a two stage diverter to DHW and slab heating. For a few quid, it would be possible to fit a relatively small system to run your MVHR as that is not a critical system, and easily overridden manually if needs be. Some battery chemistries are inherently safer than others.
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While I appreciate it is only a workshop, thermal bridging is still important for longevity for sips, which are only OSB and PU foam, both of which absorb moisture. So in my opinion, the middle image is heading in the correct direct. I think the KORE foundation system puts the thermal break on the outside and the panels would be sitting on the fully insulated slab, but it is a while since I looked at the details.
