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Everything posted by JohnMo
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Think the only difference (I see) is the 3 port valve and possibly a different pump if you needed one. Small heat pump, ordinary one ok, big heat pump high flow would be my take on it.
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We should have installed air conditioning… now what?
JohnMo replied to Adsibob's topic in Other Heating Systems
So your window is either open and blind has to be open also or blind closed and you cannot open window - that is cr@p design. So on a summer night you go to bed and its still light, cool outside but you have to make a choice - make it dark but hot in bed or still light and cool in bed? We had Velux windows years ago, we just had a fitted blind inside so you could do both (close out light and open for ventilation) - things moved in the wrong direction. -
Gledhill - no issues with mine and paid exactly half the price with the Ideal badge on it, from the same plumbing merchant that sells both. May be the difference is mine is a slimline so coil is shaped differently.
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I would say your only option is to use a timer in summer. But you are heating a big chunk of water for the output of DHW. But are you actually getting a decent CoP with this setup? I suspect keeping a TS hot for DHW and CH must cost an arm and leg. I would look at dumping the TS all together and install an invented cylinder for DHW and the a 3 port divert to switch from DHW to CH. I assume you have a low temp heating system?
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We should have installed air conditioning… now what?
JohnMo replied to Adsibob's topic in Other Heating Systems
Simple automation Close blinds every morning or just don't bother opening them. Is it hot outside leave window closed, is it cooler outside than inside open for ventilation. Do you need automation - no We have Netatmo cameras, complete pain to setup, loose internet frequently. Just wouldn't be a company of choice for me. -
Ideally look for a 3m² or larger coil in the cylinder. Telford are reported as good go to Cylinder2Go website. I have a 210L slimline made by Ideal which is good also (3 bed house), lots to choose from. Personally I would avoid pre-plumbed, lots of stuff you don't need. Also don't waste any money getting a cylinder with built-in buffer. You need to do a search on cylinder sizing, it's based on number of bedrooms and it's an MCS guide. The heat pump installers will look for 28mm feed pipe to the cylinder coil. But they will do away with the S or Y plan heating system also, replaced with a 3 port diverter valve. But a heat pump cylinder will be great with a boiler and give really quick reheat times.
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I would get your local stove company in to do a full inspection of fire and flue. Spraying water when you know the insulation is already wet isn't a good idea.
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All it says it has to heated by a heat pump, it doesn't say from only one heat pump, or from multiple heat pumps. So a heat pump cylinder is fine, an immersion only cylinder not fine.
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Thread here on them To get grant, heating and DHW have to be driven by an ASHP according to BUS rules.
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UFH Design - LoopCAD, Heatpunk,Spreadsheets & Copilot
JohnMo replied to Adrock's topic in Underfloor Heating
No just you wallet as you will loose heat downwards Be careful with the lengths you order as it can get a lot of waste It affects flow rates and flow temp. UFH output is governed by the mean flow temp, the smaller the dT the lower the flow temp needs to be. Once you get fairly well insulated the flow temp has very little impact on floor heat output. What is changes is reaction time, so how long you need to allow for the floor to impact room temp. I have a loose 300mm spacing (but much lower heat loss per m2), it's a glacial time scale from cold floor to hot house, but that only occurs once per year. Rest of the time its running weather compensation, so only has to react to daily changes in the weather. You can either use 150mm or relax the spacing slightly, but with your heat loss I would stick to 150mm. Is this an add on to an existing system, boiler or heat pump? -
So not really on the agenda, not even worth discussing it so far in to the future, so much can change in that time. 12 years ago I moved in to my forever home - since built a house elsewhere and sold the forever home. All your equipment could be ready for scrap heap if you don't install well in 15 years time. Have actually sized the heat loads you need? No idea the insulation levels of the additional building or the house? The heat pump could be big or it could be way undersized?
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UFH Design - LoopCAD, Heatpunk,Spreadsheets & Copilot
JohnMo replied to Adrock's topic in Underfloor Heating
First not enough insulation really You either do no insulation and use ground as a heat store, then run heating low and slow for the whole heating season, or at least 150mm PIR, but the more the better. This limits heat seeping downwards never to return. Do yourself a favour and swop to Pert-Al-Pert, easier to manipulate. 16mm is the size to use. Flow dT is likely to either 4 or 7 rather than 10. Layout looks good, making use of pipe to and from rooms to heat halls etc. Easy way to fix that, pull the hall pipes closer together then use a longer pipe length for room A-02 and make an addition loop or two in the hall. -
I was thinking more like this, way less noise, possibly a better quality of manufacture. 9443_EN_Unico_Next-F_REV2.pdf One place selling them, not price checked etc. https://aircareappliances.co.uk/collections/olimpia-splendid/products/olimpia-splendid-unico-2-1kw-evo-f-16hp-pva-9000btu-all-in-one-air-conditioning-unit-and-heat-pump
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So reality check - spending the same price on piping as an ASHP? If you are knocking down why are spending a fortune on ASHP and heating system? Pipes you linked to are pretty small dia. The pipe sizes will not support your huge heat pump, they are too small for you cold water main with the booster. I have a long run from ASHP to house and use 28mm pipe for that, your 18kW will have to support 3x the flow! You really would need a secondary return loop for DHW to make hot water usable in the house. So you need an additional pipe. If you are knocking down and rebuilding, your heat pump will be huge and no longer appropriate for new house. A new build to slightly better that building regs is unlikely to need any more than 6kW. While your house is being built the 18kW ASHP will not support your rental and workshop - it will be too big and short cycle to an early death. Suspect some more thinking time is needed, your current plan doesn't work!
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There is a review of different makes and models in 'Which' some are really good others are pants. Best one cooled the test room from 35 to 25 in around 30 mins the worst was over 3 hrs.
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Viessmann 100-W Boiler, Wet UFH, 2 Port Valve and Opentherm
JohnMo replied to Antec123's topic in Central Heating (Radiators)
If running opentherm does the UFH even need a 2 port valve. Could the UFH pump just be wired direct to thermostat. UFH zone hot, UFH pump stops? -
I said pulling, as in pulling in electric. The graph of our ASHP was pulling in 840W it's a 6kW that modulates poorly. So see no reason why a 4kW ASHP would need anything more than 500W, should be way less. 1.8kW is output heat I suspect. So doing cooling could be pulling in 360W or less
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That would heat my house at -9 outside. Even poorly insulated a 1 to 1.5kW through wall ticking away would be good. It would only take 300W electric. Or about 7-8p an hour to run
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Why bother with a split system, just get a through wall Aircon unit. They are generally smaller.
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Buy Greenwood CV2 or CV3 dMEV. They are best part of silent, they have smart auto boost on rising humidity levels (so taking a shower for example) and cost pennies a year to run. Then install humidity activated trickle vents in place of the your manual ones. Any trickle vents in wet rooms seal up. Then you will have a simple demand activated ventilation system.
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Good possiblity is no. If you have intermittent fans currently I would consider changing to dMEV, these run continuously at a low level and are silent. In our last house the utility fan didn't come on for the 10 years we were there.
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I would leave it alone for a couple of hours and see if it fixes itself. Are you running weather compensation? But some alarm bells You have ASHP which is great, but your house is zoned and this will mean inefficient running If you need thermostats flow temp is too high. If you have zone it may also mean you have a buffer again driving inefficiency.
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Not got the money at the moment, to change car, so a bit of a sacrifice to save a hundred quid or so.
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You won't need much sun to make it super hot. Add blinds/curtains to room lights, window and bifold, and manage temperature by closing as needed. If you an ASHP can it do cooling?
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Viessmann 100-W Boiler, Wet UFH, 2 Port Valve and Opentherm
JohnMo replied to Antec123's topic in Central Heating (Radiators)
Video to watch Thread to read