
Bornagain
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Everything posted by Bornagain
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I have one of these units and the App allows you to plan for different temperatures, at different times, on different days. It works very well and I can't imagine how it could be more flexible.
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Ours are internally beaded, it does indeed give a very sleek look from the outside. We have never needed support so I can't comment on their aftercare.
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Yes. We bought from them in 2011, they supplied and installed. They were easy to deal with, and delivered bang on time. On the assumption they are the same blokes - a pair of Lithuanian brothers - then I would use them again without any worries.
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Based on my schoolboy chemistry, and assuming a density of Natural gas of around 0.8kg/m3 then I calculate that burning 0.42m3 of natural gas would produce 714g of condensate.
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Are we targeting ASHP's at the wrong market?
Bornagain replied to ProDave's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
We did. It didn't and it didn't. -
Are we targeting ASHP's at the wrong market?
Bornagain replied to ProDave's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Well, other than the fact that it was the better part of four years late and at least £4 Billion overbudget. -
Heat Pumps work when installed correctly...
Bornagain replied to Marvin's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
As you have experienced, if the radiators are large enough that 38C water can heat the house then a HP is fine, not as good as UFH which in our case is fed with water in the mid twenties. There are many factors that influence the cost of heating, but insulation and air tightness are king. -
Heat Pumps work when installed correctly...
Bornagain replied to Marvin's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
This story is on the one hand completely true, whilst at the same time pretty misleading. It is cheap to operate a heat pump driving underfloor heating in a well insulated shell and slab, or an air2air pump in a well insulated shell. However, using a heat pump to heat water to 60C for radiators in a poorly insulated or draughty house is a licence to spend a lot of money both on the installation and energy bills. The Guardian either does not understand the difference, or is perhaps just keen to support the current Government drive. -
Water main, actual workers (wedge of cash)
Bornagain replied to Big Jimbo's topic in General Plumbing
We knocked down and rebuilt an old house in a village, the house was supplied from the water main with a 25mm meter and we ran the pipe from the meter to the house in 32mm. All our neighbours complain of low water pressure and low flow. Our water pressure and flow is fine, easily enough for two showers to run at the same time. We attribute our lack of problems to the 32mm supply pipe. -
No, when running serial strings the Voltage goes up as you assume, the current is the same, and hence the total power goes up, so for example the shed system will have 490V and 5500 Watts, hence a current of about 11 Amps. 11 Amps over 95 meters will require a cable much bigger than 0.8917 mm2. Remember that the cable will go there and back.
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Self Demolishing A House
Bornagain replied to Internet Know How's topic in New House & Self Build Design
We got a guy who knocked down our old house by hand as he wanted the bricks. He did it for nowt, and was easily the mosy dangerous contractor that I have ever seen or heard of. He started the work until a few days before Christmas and was finished very early in the new year - he did it then because in his words " the council and the HSE will be on holiday" The knackered bricks (of which there were many) went on the back of a farm trailer to a farmer for his tracks The timber was burned on site. Metal went to the scrapyard. Everything else went to the tip. Cost = £0. Took a couple of weeks. -
Hi, We built a 190m2 ICF house with triple glazing, 300mm eps underfloor, 600+mm insulation in loft, MVHR Our house is all electric but we do have a wood burning stove. Our heating and hotwater come from E7, heating by direct imersion a 500L thermal store, wet underfloor heating downstairs. No heating upstairs. Total electricity demand in the last 12 months has been 7200 kWHr. E7 overnight useage = 3800 kWHr, if you assume that the background load for all the usual bits and bobs is 250w, then the energy to provide heating and hot water is around 3100kWHr/year. 1 kWHr of E7 electricity costs around 7.2p, therefore we provide heating and hot water for about £230/yr. If we did it all with an ASHP @ a COP of 4, then this bill would drop to around £60/yr. This means an ASHP would save about £170/yr - and that assumes no breakdowns or maintenance. By the time an ASHP has paid itself back, it is in the scrap bin and you need to buy a new one. Stick to an imersion heater, much cheaper in the short term, long term, and less to go wrong.
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c'mon guys, it's not as complicated as you are thinking......