Jump to content

SimonD

Members
  • Posts

    1864
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

SimonD last won the day on January 30

SimonD had the most liked content!

About SimonD

Recent Profile Visitors

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

SimonD's Achievements

Advanced Member

Advanced Member (5/5)

912

Reputation

  1. This thread is very long so I don't know whether it's happened already, but would @zoothorn consider sharing the survey document showing the house heat loss, the model of his new heat pump and perhaps even the radiators sizes and types he's got installed? That way we could perhaps formulate an answer based on the facts of the situation and know how leaky the house is?. Or maybe an EPC certificate, that way it's possible to do a performance estimate on flow temps.
  2. I used Gerband products from PassivHaus Systems but then needed some extra and they didn't have the Gerband in stock - I went for the own brand PHS stuff and it seems absolutely fine if not quite as good as the Gerband stuff. Only limitation is minimum order quantities.
  3. If it's all properly designed, there's no need for them, but BCO might ask for them to be installed. I have an old inline fan in a cupboard in the kitchen but not connected, another in the guest bathroom not connected and a small one in the ensuite that I've just put in at minimum fan speed because my wife was worried.....
  4. No worries! 😊 Yeah, that's one option, but will double up the amount of timber in need to use. I will keep this option in my back pocket. Only good enough to use as loft storage to get things out of the way instead of having to make a shed or get a half container. I was wondering whether I could get away with 50mm bearing and even if it's 75-80mm that should be fine, which means I could get the joists in place with a small amount of bearing on existing wall plates and then bolt additional wall plates to the wall immediately below for the rest of the required bearing. I think this might be the solution.
  5. A low loss header is not going to be the solution for getting your system to heat up faster. What is responsible for getting heat into your house from your boiler is mean water temperature, driven by the boiler. You've got more than enough output available from the boiler to do this. Now, with 8000 I have heard feedback that it takes a while until it ramps up to max output when the heating is initially turned on. First, test this by doing some gas rates. When you turn on your system from cold - go to the meter and take a reading at the same time as starting your stopwatch. At 2 minutes, take another reading. Then do this say 10 minutes later, and again after 10 minutes. By all means post up the before and after figures so we can do the calcs. If you want immediate feedback, you can do the first gas rate and then put the boiler into chimney mode and max. then do another gate rate and calculate the difference. So again, to do a gas rate: Have boiler running Take meter reading and start stopwatch at the same time At 2 minutes, take meter reading again and post up results. What we want to find out is if the boiler is programmed to run at a lower output for a period before ramping up to maximum output and how long this takes under normal running conditions. Ideally we want to do this with all the settings at default, before you've amended anything like pump setting etc. As an approach to heating there is the idea that not ramping the boiler up to max output immediately provides energy savings as well as reducing overall wear and tear on the boiler itself. ATAG, for example, has for years had an approach where it starts on minimum output and slowly ramps up output over a long period of time. Others will modulate too rather than put everything in at once. The conclusion we may end up with is that you have to put the heating on earlier to get it to temp for when you want it and change your behaviour and expectations. If it does turn out that it takes a while to reach its max output and that this is just a feature of the boiler, it's not really something you can put on the installer because it's unlikely they knew about this when specifying the boiler as it's unlikely WB made this explicit. The gas boiler industry and market have unfortunately been complicit in the de-skilling of the heating engineer industry for the last few decades, as, of course, they know best.....
  6. Not without damage as the felt is properly fixed. I have to say that compared the the old bungalow, this garage was well built with attention to detail.
  7. It's just like this but with ties every other rafter.
  8. I need to create a loft in the existing garage before I build the new one. It's got a traditional pitched roof with rafter tiers every other rafter. The ties aren't of sufficient size to use as rafters across the current span, so I'm considering how to easily add joists across to create my new loft space. Options I'm considering are: 1. Cut ends of new joist on the diagonal and then fix to existing wall plate - but with sufficient bearing on the wall plates I don't know if I can slot them in; 2. Install wall plates to the wall just below the ties and fix new joists to these (garage has sufficient height for this); 3. Sister the ties with the new deeper joists - and add new ones to rafters without existing ties. Walls are ashlar faced breeze block. Any thoughts, ideas and experience to help me decide? Any details I need to be aware of?
  9. I have to say, John, that I try to avoid WB boilers like the plague. I think their designs are awful, I hate working on them and I would definitely never install one (although I have installed one, once!). I think the 8000s are worse than ever, but lots of installers seem to like them for whatever reason. I've never been called to investigate this specific problem, only that radiators aren't getting hot and this is almost always to do with a system balance issue and not the boiler itself. When I do system diagnostics involving temperature measurement I always ignore the internal boiler temperature given by the sensors and instead use my own clamps to as close to the boiler as possible. This is because I very often find discrepancies between displayed flow/return temps from internal sensors and those measured immediately outside the boiler, it's not just with Worcester. The only times I take the internal sensor readings more seriously, is if I see the boiler cycling when my readings suggest it shouldn't and 5C difference is just not unusual in these circumstances. This is why my approach here would be to ignore the boiler and investigate how the wider system behaves over time. A recent example is a hall where I installed a boiler a few years back. I designed a low temp system and explained all this to the caretaker and for several years the system ran beautifully. This year I received calls to say the heating wasn't working and the hall wasn't getting warm. I went and looked at the boiler and found out that the new caretaker was expecting the system to heat the hall up from freezing cold to between 18-20C within 40minutes so they'd even cranked up the boiler output to 75C! I explained to them that they should drop the flow temp back down and be a bit more patient as their bills had dropped noticeably since I installed the system. So in short, sometimes it's about education!
  10. I have to jump in an ask why would a system with the installed pipework as described ever need an secondary pump of 8meters head, let alone a LLH. I find it almost inconceivable that the index circuit on this system needs an extra few meters of head above the 4 it's already got, unless the installer had accidentally welded shut the pipes somewhere. I've worked on Worcester 8000 system boilers that are fine under more demanding system conditions. I would suggest doing a factory reset of the boiler (maybe that was done when the engineer came?) to get everything back to default. Then run the system taking regular temperature measurements through the system. Pinpointing which rads are problematic and then taking a methodical approach to understand the whole system behaviour. But I'm also wondering what exactly is the problem you're attempting to fix? If it's this: Then we need more specific information about what exactly you define as quick and from what beginning state to what desired state.
  11. The basis for my calculations came from the Handbook of Domestic Ventilation by Rodger Edwards. It's a book that's getting a bit long in the tooth and could really do with another edition, but the fundamentals, including various formulas are there. Its section on PSV is very comprehensive and shows that it works, and if facts works better in air-tight houses because they have more control - e.g. studies in Denmark show a mean ACH of about 0.45 with PSV with no detrimental effect on air quality. In terms of understanding implications of hygroscopic materials, I did a lot of research looking at studies across Europe and North American to gain an understanding of how these materials reduce ventilation rates due to buffering moisture load - so, for example in cases of PSV, with a house that does not have moisture buffering peak RH can reach 75% for short periods (but not periods long enough to cause issues with condensation etc, in the building) and with moisture buffering, this can easily be reduced to peak loads of 60-65% during peak moisture load, like showers, baths and cooking etc. However, the area is still pretty poorly research tbh, so there is some guesswork required and a careful attention to detail. I have made sure I choose materials through the whole of the fabric, including paints - so everything is finished with clay paint. I also use gypsum plaster as opposed to lime because gypsum is both vapour permeable and hygroscopic whereas lime is only vapour permeable - which is why lime can survive damp stone properties and gypsum can't, but gypsum is excellent in a newly built of deep retrofit property (but it's also been used in Italy for a good couple of thousand years because of its moisture buffering properties). We also have clay bricks on the ground floor, which are brilliant for moisture buffering. Yes, it's bouyancy and also wind - if the PSV is designed and installed properly it should benefit from a negative pressure zone above the roof. It's actually been shown that if ventilation at the bottom of the stack is increased, the flow through the PSV increases, which is one reason why PSV performs better in airtight buildings that have controllable ventilators - in leaky houses you can easily get over-ventilation with PSV.
  12. You've also got the option of just buying a second hand unit too, which you don't usually get with a gas boiler. Or at least I wouldn't install a second gas boiler for any of my customers.
  13. Not really. Theoretically it should be easier than swapping out a gas boiler. Even connecting the flushing equipment is easier as you can do it off the isolators outside.
  14. MCS and the consumer protection companies don't really like this structure any more. They prefer the BUS grant to be subtracted from the quote.
×
×
  • Create New...