Jump to content

-rick-

Members
  • Posts

    803
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

-rick- last won the day on February 28

-rick- had the most liked content!

About -rick-

Personal Information

  • Location
    London

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

-rick-'s Achievements

Regular Member

Regular Member (4/5)

276

Reputation

  1. As always depends on your situation. Short runs from the manifold? Especially if run with smaller diameter pipe (10mm copper, hep2o plastic, etc), don't need HRC. If you have long runs, especially of 15mm+ pipe then HRC may make sense. I can't find it right now but there was an online calculator/diagram that someone posted before that would neatly show how quickly a tap would take to warm up given length of pipe + pipe diameter. Maybe most of your sinks are close to the manifold so won't need HRC but one is a long way away and for that one you want a HRC (connected to PIR in the room so it only runs when someone is near the tap).
  2. I don't know how your browse activity on here but if like me you use the activity view then switching it to the condensed version makes it a little better if you want to ignore things (or even just not see every update).
  3. Congratulations. This has been a masterclass in successful self building by managing contractors! More important than that is the contractor selection, project management, etc, and I think it's you (with assist from Mrs P) that has done that so you can feel great satisfaction with how this project has gone. I'm guessing (maybe you said before) your background is in project management and if not it's an even greater achievement. When you have time and if you have the energy I and I'm sure many others on here would appreciate it if you could share as much as you can on your process for managing this project. What your average day looked like, tips and tricks, preparation, etc. I think this could be really useful for those of us with less project management experience!
  4. £70 a month (£840 per year) no, as I've said before I think there is a decent improvement to be had for not ridiculous money. As I've said my mums uninsulated house with an inefficient gas setup and various other problems costs about £2000 per year to keep at around 20 during the day but they let it get cold overnight). I do think it's possible for zoot to be much more comfortable for an affordable amount extra per year, at least as a trial. If zoot has money to consider ripping up his concrete floor and replacing it he has the money to try this. Maybe he doesn't have it to run long term but having the information about what it takes to warm the house can direct him to the most cost effective improvements to lower those bills. Right now it's finger in the air guesswork. I've not given up yet but I do understand where you are coming from. I hope zoot will agree to try it for a period of time. If it works then we can have a conversation about whats next. But fundamentally zoot doesn't believe this stuff and words on a screen aren't going to change his mind. Being warm in his house might.
  5. It's a lot of money to do that. Zoot hasn't been hugely clear on his financial constraints but given he got his heatpump installed through a low income support scheme I think it's reasonable to assume an AGA is off the table. Zoot did have a woodburner, that has also failed to heat his place. I tend to think the heatpump can work and would be cheaper to run than an aga but only if used in a very specific way and one that zoot is very resistant to doing.
  6. It's been asked for repeatedly. There should be two of them. One from the original install and one from the monobloc replacement. Unfortunately a lot of things get missed in this thread. There is so much going on I can understand why.
  7. Phew, far too much technical jargon there. I'm struggling to keep up! 😜
  8. No sounds very much like your body reacting to the very bad environment of your cottage. Unless you weren't spending any time at all in the cottage (you say you were in and out) then it's likely your cottage. I wouldn't be surprised if your health is degraded even now living as you do. You've just got used to it. It's one of the reasons I'm putting so much effort into trying to persuade you to warm your place up. Having a warm home will extend your life and help you be happier. With your home as it is you are one unlucky infection away from ending up in hosptial or worse.
  9. Serves me right for being lazy and using the first random website with a humidity calculator on it :) 53.6% is indeed perfectly fine indoors. 45-55% is ideal IMO
  10. What I explained is proven science. If your idea of how something works doesn't match well established science then either you've made a major discovery and are in line for a Nobel Prize or you are wrong. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humidity And? In winter the outside air may have a relative humidity of 100%, ie, it can't go higher. The amount of moisture in inside air assuming you warm the building is almost always higher than the amount of moisture in cold outside air (because humans breath). If your building is at 20C and you open the door, let in a load of cold, moist, air and then close the door you most likely you will either keep the internal moisture level the same or LOWER it. You will also lower the temperature, but if the building fabric is up to temperature (as I am suggesting) then this temperature will return to the previous one very quickly. This is not how it works, the amount of moisture in cold outside air will not introduce moisture, if anything the opposite. You misunderstand humidity. No. Dehumidifers are generally there (in the UK) to remove moisture introduced by human activities. Washing, breathing, etc. In countries where the outside air is hot and humid and they use internal air conditioning to cool the temperature your description would be right but not in cold UK. If your microclimate has 100% humidity during the winter that isn't significantly different to my climate in london where its about 80% humidity in winter. My inside humidity is 45% even though the outside humidity is 80%. How? I heat my place. I don't have a dehumidifer. If you have a warm house you will feel dry*, the warmth 'dries' the air (the amount of moisture in the air stays the same, its the relative humidity that changes). * Assuming you open the windows regularly to blow away any moisture from breathing/washing/etc or have mechanical ventilation. It's a complete misunderstanding of how things work. It may feel comforting to have the excuse as to why you are cold but that's all it is, a story you tell yourself. I understand this is difficult, especially when others around you say the same thing, but this is the thing with stuff like this the comman man in the street understanding of the way the world works is often wrong. Our modern world wouldn't exist without the scientific understanding of how humidity, heat transfer, etc, works. People cleverer than us have figured this out decades/centuries ago.
  11. This is bollocks. Here are some cold hard numbers. Maximum possible humidity is 100%. Assume your outside air is saturated (100% humidity). Assume its 10C outside. If you heat your indoor space to 20C the air, holding exactly the same amount of moisture will be at 50% humidity, which is perfectly fine for an indoor climate. No dehumidifiers needed, just heating the house to 20C vs the outside air of 10C. If the outside air is 0C then you only need to heat to 10C to get the humidity down to 50%. This all assumes you aren't introducing more humidity into the air (which of course we all do as living beings) but the point stands. To solve humidity issues in a house, warm it up.
  12. One of the reasons I have noted for insulating pipes is that the insulation can act as a buffer/decoupler from thermal movement and noise (assuming you strap the insulation not the pipes).
  13. I have no confidence we can get your place warm during the day if you let it cool down like this overnight. Frankly I think it's a waste of time to try and help if you are not willing to consider higher. It might be possible that this will work during the shoulder months (ie, now) but it won't work during the winter. If you want to have 10C overnight then you would need to accept that the temp during the day won't be much higher. If your concern is noise, then that can be dealt with separately. With my bedroom door closed I can't hear my boiler running 2 meters away, I'm sure it's possible to arrange that for you as well. Even maintaining 10C overnight when its 0C outside will involve the heatpump working overnight. So setting 10C isn't a way of limiting noise. It's just a way of never being warm.
  14. That would be an excellent result. When I've done rough calcs to see if his heatpump could cope I've used a U value of 2 (1.71 was the worst case wall looked at in the Scottish study I used and I rounded up to be conservative). Even with a U value of 2 the heatpump should be capable (barely) of maintaining the space at a steady temp.
  15. I'm not sure your experience can apply to Zoot too well. He has a 9kw heatpump that will work most efficiently with relatively cool radiators. A 30kw AGA pumping out heat to the radiators at 70C will have a much easier time heating the air quickly for short bursts than Zoots heatpump. On the coldest days zoots heatpump might have to be working near flat out just to offset losses meaning no spare capacity to alter room temp. I very much hope that zoots property has better heat loss numbers than these worst case calcs suggest but without a more detailled information from zoot it's the best we've got.
×
×
  • Create New...