Bramco
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Everything posted by Bramco
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Kitchen design app.
Bramco replied to Russell griffiths's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
IKEA Then if you want to throw money away take that to someone with a flash showroom... Simon -
In the old house (current) we have no BT and dropped the Virgin phone line and now only have mobile numbers - but then you're in Derbyshire, so probably need either BT or Virgin for a land line and maybe the other as backup!! On the new build, we're also only lekky and water. The Virgin line can come in via the conduit already laid by the brother in law next door. Simon
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But as my son the architect pointed out - you could build a transparent house. Wouldn't the planners have a field day with that. Son #1 - a scientist - mentioned the appalling ecological consequences of the production process. Simon
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Anyone have any experience of Duration Windows
Bramco replied to Adsibob's topic in Windows & Glazing
I phoned today and they promised a quote by the end of the day - we'll see... Simon -
Anyone have any experience of Duration Windows
Bramco replied to Adsibob's topic in Windows & Glazing
How long did it take to get a response - I sent our window schedule the other day but haven't even had a 'thanks for your enquiry, we'll get back to you' email. Simon -
https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/transparent-wood-lighter-stronger-glass-090419778.html Given the DIY nature of the forum, I'm sure this could be perfected as a DIY glass in a month or two...... Few chemicals, a former, some plastic goop and a trowel - easy peasy ..... Simon
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Or take a look at the emonPi which is a system from the open energy monitoring lot in Wales. Emonpi in their shop -> https://shop.openenergymonitor.com/emonpi-energy-monitor-solar-pv-bundle/ Very good kit - and if you don't want to buy a ready made system it's all open source so you can roll your own. They're also doing some good stuff with the Octopus tariffs and EV charging. Simon
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Round our way going to committee isn't the answer - they end up following the planning recommendation - or at least the chairman does. And the cttee btw know nothing about planning law - it's just how they take on what planning are telling them. We had 2 goes at ctte (local councillor owns adjacent land so it had to go there) both times it was a draw and the chairman voted with the planning advice - which was obviously wrong and we'd pointed it out to them. Maybe that's what did it.... Anyway, at appeal the inspector essentially said - no idea what the council are doing in this case it's obvious it's OK - permission granted. So I'd go with stick to your guns but all the rest of the crap beforehand, I'd fast fail - we wasted a LOT of time trying to do the right thing. We started over 3 years ago and we're only planning to break ground in a few months time. Years you can't get back. Simon
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Zinc angled standing seam.
Bramco replied to Makeitstop's topic in House Extensions & Conservatories
Havre you looked at aluminium - not as long lasting but probably cheaper £130 per sq m sounds astronomical. We spoke to a local standing seam co and aluminium is as versatile as zinc apparently - again you'd have to be careful about making sure you don't get bi-metalic corrosion. Simon -
That's the conclusion we came to too. We're on an acre plot so would have had the room and initially GSHP was the plan until we looked at things and for the reasons above it's just not worth the investment. Simon
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A decent sized contract - I'd quote for it but then....
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We also had a quote direct from Velfac last year. I wonder if it depends on how many windows you need? Simon
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Resubmission after dismissed Appeal - Help!
Bramco replied to Mrsmedhurst's topic in Planning Permission
On a more serious note... Search the Web for similar applications and appeals. We had to do this for our infill appeal in the green belt. Your search should turn up some agents or solicitors who have handled cases like this. Give them a call - they'll be helpful - they'd like your business!! If you can find someone out there that seems to have won a similar case and you think they are ok, then work out with them how they would go about winning an appeal for you. And be patient - planning an appeals are marathons not sprints. Simon -
Resubmission after dismissed Appeal - Help!
Bramco replied to Mrsmedhurst's topic in Planning Permission
Indeed. Equestrian is agriculture in Europe but then .... And that's not a Brexit comment it's gastronomical... Simon -
Choice of ASHP for near-passivehouse
Bramco replied to DInwood's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Useful guidance - thanks. Just out of interest, if you are cooling in the summer, then I assume you have a bypass round the buffer tank and blender? Or are you not cooling the slab in the summer? Simon -
The part of planning that validate applications have little or no time or on the ground local knowledge unless they happen to live round the corner and even then... I'm sure they take a site location plan as gospel unless someone local complains. So the onus is on you or neighbours to point this out. Probably called democracy but .... Local councillors can be really helpful with this kind of thing, except maybe they're thick as thieves with the perpetrator - it is the time of backhanders. As @PeterW said the council solicitors are on the hook if it's wrong. So an anonymous email/letter should work. From experience don't bother calling the case officer.... Simon
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Integrating an MVHR to our build
Bramco replied to djcdan's topic in Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
We had heat loss calculations done for both 0.7 and 1.2 and the difference in terms of heating required was actually quite small. Walls will be 1.4 and roof and insulated slab 1. You have to weigh up the additional cost of going to 0.7 against the expense in terms of lekky for the ASHP with 1.2. When you work it out, it's not a lot - for us it would be £100 a year but a LOT more to do the windows at 0.7. Having said that we may well go the extra mile to get an A rating - daft?!!!.... Simon -
ASHP, UFH and solar thermal, or ASHP, UFH and MVHR????
Bramco replied to Dicky's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Agree wholeheartedly - we installed solar thermal when PV was too expensive - it's great in the summer for hot water but you need a few panels for it to be effective. In the winter it doesn't really do a lot, so no use for hot water, which in your question would mean an immersion heater if you didn't use the ASHP. If you use the ASHP for hot water as well as UFH then it should be up to a third cheaper than an immersion heater due to the COP of the ASHP. MVHR will simply mean you don't lose a lot of heat through the air changes you need for air quality. When PV came down in price we installed some PV - sadly we didn't remove the solar thermal and replace it with PV - wish we had!! PV is much more versatile as you can divert any excess through an immersion heater into your hot water tank - and when that's had enough it will supplement the power needed for any other electrical devices and if they aren't using anything into a battery for later consumption, or your EV. And hopefully in a couple of years more vehicle manufacturers will get 'enlightened' and allow V2H or V2G - in which case you won't need a house battery as you'll have one on 4 wheels parked up outside. (Only the Leaf does this currently). Batteries are great for some of the new electricity tariffs like Octopus agile - if you can avoid the peak times, rates are cheap and last summer they were paying you to fill up your EV or battery storage overnight - yes a few p per kW to take electricity off their hands!! Kerching!! Simon PS We're also about to start a new build - ASHP (UFH and DHW), MVHR and a 4kW PV array (and when the SAAB convertible dies an EV...) PPS I saw a table comparing prices of batteries on Naked Solar (was put on to this by a Mesh Energy presentation) Tesla come out as one of the cheapest in their comparison which wasn't what I expected -> https://nakedsolar.co.uk/storage/ scroll down a bit to see the comparison table. -
They do and I think the IOTCricket is based on either the original or the ESP32. But of course you need the software to handle the sleep, awaken and manage the wifi to send the data. The IOTCricket seems to have solved this, although it's worth reading Pete Scargill's blog. For us the ESPs were in a place where power wasn't an issue, so they ran continuously without using the sleep functionality - it's a lot easier if you can do this. Tsk tsk - and you've had many months of Covid idling when you could have ....... ? Simon
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That's a route I've been down as well. Feeding the data to an emoncms system running on a pi. These though wouldn't be battery powered and you'd need some software. Another option are the sonof devices (we have some of the switches and a temperature switch in the shed to turn on the heating when it gets too cold). Sonof devices can also relatively easily be reprogrammed with the Tasmota IOT software which is much more versatile and doesn't use a Chinese cloud server. If you need a battery powered device instead of the esp 01, there's a UK company thingsonedge.com with a new device called iotcricket. Not tried one yet but Pete Scargill has -> https://tech.scargill.net/the-iotcricket-from-thingsonedge-com/
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I've had a lot of pleasure from installing an energy monitor. Another great aspect of these designs is that you can monitor temperatures as well as the electricity flow, so we have our thermal store all wired up. For the new house we're planning to do a DIY thermostat monitoring the temperature of the slab as well as the room temperatures. The guys that developed things are also doing a lot of great work on the open ESVE, so software to manage when to charge your EV using data on the Octopus Agile and Go tariffs. PM me if you are interested in what we have done in the current house. Simon
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You need to install a system that will tell you. Take a look at the open energy monitor site -> https://openenergymonitor.org/ They sell a simple system based on a Rasberry pi which will monitor your overall usage and your PV generation - there are tools included to allow you to create your own dashboard. There's also instructions on how to build a PV diverter to divert any excess into an immersion heater. These will only divert when there is excess PV over and above your consumption, so automatically will stop diverting if say you turn on the dishwasher and you aren't generating enough to run it (there are commercial units that do this as well). There are also some apps for android and apple so that you can see what's happening and on the community there's lots of additional info and ideas - for example with a fairly simple bit of code you could light an LED when you are generating enough to run a big appliance - of course you could just look out of the window ?. Also follow the advice about running big appliances round midday and only one at a time - you'll get the best self consumption that way. Simon
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Ours is only there in the current house because solar PV and solar thermal as the only energy source wouldn't cover the needs of an old fairly draughty house in terms of heating in the winter. For the house we're building which will be very well insulated with MVHR we'll only need an ASHP for both heating and DHW. We'll still use a PV divert into the DHW tank I think, so as not to waste the generated energy. Simon
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New build water calcs - I don't get it
Bramco replied to dysty42's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
But the calculators work through how many showers, loos etc you have and there is nowhere to put in how many people there are...... I can only use one loo obvs but our new house will have 3 en-suites and according to the calculators we'll be massively over the 110l per person. Simon -
New build water calcs - I don't get it
Bramco replied to dysty42's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Agreed - not that you're going mad of course - but the calculators take no account of the number of people. We have to do the 110l/per person limit but if you add up all the toilets, showers, a bath, washing machine etc in the calculator then it comes out as way above 110l. Where on earth does the per person bit get factored in? Simon
