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Posts
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Joined
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Days Won
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Everything posted by SteamyTea
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Roof design. Get the angles optimised for winter, and have lots of usable area, with no obstructions. All the rest is tinkering and the technology to do that will come along in due course. Then look at how little energy you actually need, so don't have 20 6W LED downlighters in the kitchen. Maybe a couple of 5W LED pendants will suffice. A 3 minute shower uses a lot less DHW than a bath filled up to the brim (and I like that more than a shower). So compromises are in order. Get a washing line.
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That is fraud, plagiarism, dishonest and probably illegal. Would be very irritating if some little fart reported it, after reading about it on here.
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Measuring levels, can a layperson do it?
SteamyTea replied to Grian's topic in Surveyors & Architects
Made it almost a week so far. -
What I have. Had some buried last summer, but they soon packed up, or maybe the cable to them broke. Pulled then up a while back so shall see what they are up to.
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Was my thinking, maybe a trial is the answer. Shaded area and compare temperatures. It has come about as my OAT sensor (DHT22) has eventually got too wet and packed up. So probably time to change it to a DS18B20, should be fairly easy to do.
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Ask a Quantum Physics to do it, then the bats will be both there, and not there.
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When working out thermal losses through walls, it is usual to use outside air temperature (OAT). Would it be more accurate to use actual outside wall temperature (OWT). This would more accurately describe the thermal flux as it would account for solar gain, wind, evaporation etc. Should be easy enough to bury a sensor a few mill deep into a wall. May also be worth adding sensors to opposing, or all external walls even. This would give a much better picture of what is happening. Thoughts anyone?
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ASHP SCOP=3 in uninsulated 1960s house!
SteamyTea replied to richi's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
I am awaiting @Dave Jones to comment, I am sure his input will shed light on it. Until then, one question? Does this installation do the DHW? -
Does the module array have shading issues? Also worth looking at the efficiency distribution, it is not often that system work anywhere near maximum output, most of the time they are below 25% of the name plate capacity. Would be better to add an extra module or two if you can.
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I take it you did not pay the hundred quid with a credit card.
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Run the Peugeot off it.
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Be more like 20⁰C difference, and I assumed UFH with thicker insulation and radiators with thinner insulation, where the dT may only be 10⁰C (assumes winter ground temperature is 8⁰C). But think the original question was with regards UFH and where does the thickness come from. It comes from Part L building regs. Probably why they are going to be updated to take low temperature UFH into account.
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Not as if we go below 0⁰C for very long in the far SW. That is the easy and cheap way. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/353514304085
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What delta T have you calculated that on? Room temperature to Ground temperature (about 10°C) or slab temperature to ground temperature (about 22°C). Two things, BEVs, even if powered purely from coal fired powerstation have a lower life cycle analysis than ICE cars. Lithium is not, generally, 'dug from the earth'. It is dissolved in water and then naturally evaporated, leaving a salt that then gets processed. Unlike iron and aluminium ore which is mined, generally open cast mining.
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Passive House, storms and power cuts
SteamyTea replied to Russdl's topic in Energy Efficient & Sustainable Design Concepts
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-60453727 Don't use four candles. Still, at least their fire brigade has a roof. Was told that one of the fire stations lost it's roof, along with the RNLI at Sennen Cove. -
That is missing the point. This extension is getting UFH, so the slab will be at 30⁰C plus, not at 17 or 18⁰C. You would not expect a plumber to bury a radiator in the garden.
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why do you think that when the UFH makes the temperature gradient to the ground a lot higher?
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It is an extension to an existing building, so a lower U-Value of 0.7 W.m-2.K-1, so the drawings are probably correct. Don't mean it is a wise decision.
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Passive House, storms and power cuts
SteamyTea replied to Russdl's topic in Energy Efficient & Sustainable Design Concepts
PP9s and a buzzer. -
Battery Storage installed
SteamyTea commented on MikeGrahamT21's blog entry in Back on the self-build waggon...
Trick is to not have a freezer. I have managed without one for decades. Tinned and dried food is the way to go. -
Yes. And it could be testing the MET Office prediction as much as anything else. I am going to ponder the whole problem more as I think there is merit in a simple self learning algorithms that can put the correct amount of energy into a building. This may become more useful with variable ToU tariffs as you can bank prior to a known expensive time, or take a bit of a hit until a cheap time come.
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Was thinking more along the lines of deviation from binned prediction ranges. So something like this with made up numbers: Δ Temp Range Predicted Energy Input Actual Energy Input 0 0 0.0 1 0 0.0 2 0 0.0 3 0 0.0 4 0 0.0 5 0.1 0.1 6 0.2 0.1 7 0.4 0.1 8 0.5 0.1 9 0.6 0.6 10 0.7 0.8 11 0.8 0.7 12 1.0 1.1 13 1.1 0.8 14 1.2 0.6 15 1.3 1.3 16 1.5 0.1 17 1.6 0.2 18 1.7 1.5 19 1.8 0.2 20 2.0 0.8 Giving a chart like this Which give a Chi Square result of 0.985, when tested on values greater than 0. As it is greater then 0.05, then the null hypothesis is not rejected. Though that does not mean the hypothesis is correct of course.
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At home, how much more electricity are we consuming
SteamyTea replied to ToughButterCup's topic in Power Circuits
It was a rhetorical retort to @ProDave's reply. Book is OK, even if 14 years old now.
