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Everything posted by JohnMo
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Sack him and get a proper plumber. If he can't do it now why will it get better - Why put up with it? As @FuerteStu says.
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Ask him for the pressure drop calc, get the facts, instead of assuming the world going end.
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The idea is there are are very few joints, the small diameter for a very short distance, although a pressure loss area in the grand scheme is very small. You would need to get the pressure table for the fitting and pipe and work it all out.
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Omnie Lowboard 2 insulate on non insulated ground floor
JohnMo replied to Griffithsg83's topic in Heat Insulation
I have a similar system in my garden room on 125mm centres, with a total 200mm insulation in the floor, similar amount in room and 140mm of insulation in the walls. Even at 40 deg flow temp and about 5 degs outside I could not get the room above 16. Dumped the UFH and went fan coil, everything fine. Just keep your money in your pocket. Omnie and many other systems are all the same, if they say they aren't they are playing silly games. -
Manifold system versus hot return system
JohnMo replied to Russell griffiths's topic in General Plumbing
Mine, the smallest one copes with 15mm tube for 20m each way, so should have no problem stirring a tank. -
I have come across these heat pumps. The first is rated a 3kW, it has a single outlet temperature set point. Not sure about modulation, its £1500. https://eco-outlet.co.uk/products/activair-3kw-indoor-air-source-heat-pump It sits indoors, so could be manipulated with air ducts to do cooling in summer and possibly take discharge air from the MVHR in winter, so zero defrosts. You may need to do a buffer, but no different from Jeremy and @joe90 did. Or if heating a thick slab, you could flow at the same set temperature as for DHW heating. Sounds daft, but a heat pump will manage dT first and dT is generally 5 to 6 degrees. So batch heating a floor would be as follows Water exits floor at around 23 degs at start of batch charging, dT 6 applied so flow temp is pegged at 29 until floor takes some heat, temp would very slowly ramp up, floor taking 3kW. By the time it gets to 30 degs outlet a passivhaus thermostat would trip the unit off and it would move to DHW heating. I operate my UFH in a similar way (but set point is 35) and it never goes past 33. The second unit is Cool Energy basic heat pump on eBay is 6kW unit, but control is similar to above but sits outside.
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Omnie Lowboard 2 insulate on non insulated ground floor
JohnMo replied to Griffithsg83's topic in Heat Insulation
And make sure someone doesn't put a hole in it. Would you trust a contractor - I wouldn't. You would need to protect with plenty of concrete, if it can take the weight? Just to make sure someone didn't come along later with the nail gun and fill it with holes. -
PV is connected to consumer unit after inverter (normal system), consumer unit provides electric to where ever or whatever wants it. Not directly coupled to HP. Just that the HP is another user from CU. Our HP (like many others) slowly ramps up when doing DHW, so with start flowing in the late 20s and over the next hour get to 55 degs. So the early part of DHW is actually pretty good CoP, the later part is a dreadful CoP. So not straight forward. It could be putting 2kW or more out for 400W off the grid. The 400W provided by PV the rest of the time would have powered the background loads to the house. Not easy to make the electric go to just the immersion though, unless directly wired. Add battery it makes things smooth out, currently paying 13p per kWh for 7 hours, utilisation over winter has averaged at 83% of night rate, so 17% at expensive day rate. Very patchy day for solar today, lots of clouds etc. Charged battery 70% last night, heat pump been ticking away most the morning, will be off at 12pm. Battery currently at 68%, and generated 5kWh from PV, with peaks (5kW) and troughs (0kWh), would have been useless for PV directly driving the heat pump and wasteful driving an immersion.
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Leaking distribution boxes
JohnMo replied to jayc89's topic in Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
I am using similar, used ubbink 90mm sealing rings, no issues. Are you sure you inserted deep enough? -
Just to add a couple more lines to the spreadsheet - I would say there are advantages with PV with an ASHP also, a marginal PV day may not give enough PV to fire up the immersion via a diverter to any degree that will provide usable heat. ASHP, would amplify that PV out by 2.5. Then the maths gets way to difficult.
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Omnie Lowboard 2 insulate on non insulated ground floor
JohnMo replied to Griffithsg83's topic in Heat Insulation
Read some of the other UFH threads. Neither is adequate insulation for UFH, irrespective of what the company selling these products claim. 40mm insulation is also inadequate. Insulated floor with 40mm insulation, ok if you stick with radiators. But more would be better. -
Unlikely in the UK generally. Not mentioned above is the other heat requirement of max 10W/m2. This is a design requirement because it's the max heat that can be carried via air heating through MVHR at PH flow rates. So a 200m2 house will most likely require 2kW of heat or 48kWh a day at your design temp. At full price electric that's £13 a day via a panel heater. From an ASHP at a CoP of 3, that's £4.30. Piss poor install most likely, mine is currently off, a thermostat switches it off. You have 2 aspects to concider, heating DHW and house heating. You are looking 5,500kWh of energy for a 200m2 house at passivhaus design figures. So direct electric is about £1500 a year. You hold the purse, you choose.
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Just going back in history isn't this just repost of a question you asked a while ago and got lots of feedback?
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I think you need to speak with the architect, as the number of people allocated per room is never normally two, except for the main bedroom. He is likely going to have to include this sort of of detail on his application. Not seeing any reason you would increase your treatment plant size. Use open questions when you speak to the architect, don't go hunting for answers you don't really want to hear.
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For me the whole design needs to be simplified. Too many bits and no symmetry. Big for the sake of being big. Sorry not a fan. The outbuilding doesn't tie in to the rest of the property design wise.
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This is how I did it https://forum.buildhub.org.uk/topic/31017-summer-house-insulation/
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Mitsubishi ecodan better control system
JohnMo replied to eniacs's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Seems a strange thing to cool then to heat later. Just open your bedroom window. Not exactly hot at night, we are still getting 3 degs at night and after the weekend we get zero. Not sure any heat pump will do what you want, because it's not a normal thing to do. It's either in heat or cool mode. -
This weeks Short Read: Population
JohnMo replied to SteamyTea's topic in Environmental Building Politics
Those blocks/bricks on my shoulder and on a ladder, would kill me off. That would be more than 25kg so would be a two person lift. That would be complex on a ladder. But I suppose they are the current rules. -
Are you just making issues to fix. Ply gives a good surface to mount things to. Your fire risk is way lower than a kitchen or utility (clothes dryer) for example, or your phone on charge overnight.
