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SteamyTea

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Everything posted by SteamyTea

  1. Is this for an existing house or a new build one? PV can realistically only supplement heating, not replace it, in a domestic setting. There is nothing to stop you having an ASHP, just oversize it a bit more than normal, and then supplement with some panel or fan heaters. Fan heaters will warm a room up pretty quickly. It is worth have PV anyway and, because of the magic of electricity, the electrons will go to the nearest load first and reduce imports. You can have more than 4 kWp if your DNO agrees.
  2. Cavitation also happens when there is no air. It creates a vacuum 'bubble' which then collapses under the water pressure. This micro hammering causes wear.
  3. Is cavitation a problem with pumps? https://www.thermal-engineering.org/what-is-cavitation-in-centrifugal-pumps-definition/
  4. Any help. www.homebuilding.co.uk/amp/ideas/timber-frame-houses-gallery
  5. Get back to them and ask what the w.m-2 for external wall figure is. 'very low' is meaningless, and misleading. Unlike trousers, you only have to attach them once
  6. Not really. Estate agents measure internally. Not a big ask for them to add some of the dimensions together. As an aside, I thought I would plot the ratio of perimeter to area when increase the perimeter size by 5%. The basic shape is a rectangle with depth twice that of width. This makes the m2 price cheaper for large houses.
  7. It is, and I never understand why people think it is complicated. With a heat pump there should be an air and power chart somewhere in the documentation. Use that to calculate the worse case. General consensus is that air to water heat pumps need to be oversized by 20% to 30%. Not quite so important with an A2A as you can easily supplement with s fan heater.
  8. Yes. You can take a few kWh/day off for DHW. Then proportional the rest by month to give you an idea of maximum heat loads.
  9. I would not get hung up on the electrical grin carbon intensity, we have little influence on that, it is what it is at any given time (and some of the calculations are a bit dodgy). Have you calculated your current heat and DHW loads. This is the first thing to do.
  10. Yes, or I will have to work out the number of naughtical miles till I get home. A minute of arc on planet Earth is 1 nautical mile, at the equator.
  11. I still use cubic centimetres per pound when mixing resin.
  12. Tesla Model 3 is between 1611 kg to 1847 kg. A Toyota Mirai is between 1920 kg and 1950 kg. So hydrogen is not always lighter. Just for comparison, my Ford C-Max is 1527 kg.
  13. We should stop using the old imperial measurements. And all houses for sale should state the plot size, and the building/s footprint size. Then half the confusion about price/m² would just vanish. If we did state things as they are, then we would not have left the EU, or thought that gargling with warm water would stop COVID-19. I often wonder why people are so reluctant to state basic information.
  14. I had a 3 bed house, was identical, in area, volume and shape to the mirror image one, which had 2 beds. So quoting number of bedrooms, bathrooms etc, us not a good indicator of building cost.
  15. You could ask a plumber to put in an automatic air bleeder. I don't know enough about different pumps, but others do. Put up the make and model, then the plumbers can see if it is any good.
  16. Good. So it may well just have been in need of a little tickling.
  17. Probably not. It may have heated up a little quicker.
  18. Yes. Why I think an air test needs to be done as soon as possible in the build. Probably save the extra 250 quid it costs during the first winter.
  19. Can you make the jousts deeper. https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/amp/beam-stress-deflection-d_1312.html
  20. Path of least resistance maybe.
  21. Apart from Christmas week, when I had an Aussie staying, so have I. But that is not unusual down here.
  22. This may stop the drafts inside, but does very little for the thermal performance.
  23. Does it work after a hot bath (washerwoman's fingers). Or after sanding the woodwork.
  24. Give it a few hours to warm up the cold concrete.
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