LnP
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Everything posted by LnP
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Cheaper electricity bills on the Way for Scotland?
LnP replied to ProDave's topic in Housing Politics
Perhaps because the regulator sets it up to work this way, since the context to the proposal is to help the UK achieve its net zero target. They want to incentivise renewable generation close to the demand to reduce the required changes to the grid. Beefing up the grid to get electricity from far away places is expensive and the pylons are politically difficult. -
I'm still learning. Thanks for the clarification, yes designed and commissioned, but not installed. And I noted your earlier comment "When I shared my detailed calcs with them they stopped talking to me!" So they won't guarantee your 6.5 kW requirement. They say they take care of: System Design & Diagrams Installation Support & Installer Training On Site System Check & Commission The Latest Cool Energy InverTech Heat Pump With Remote Support Over Wifi High-Quality INOX Stainless Steel Unvented Pre-Wired Cylinder Full Handover Pack & Insurance Backed Guarantee They also "take care of the paperwork" to claim the £7,500 grant.... does that mean they keep all of the grant money? Otherwise, how would they make their money? £7,500 might seem a lot for what they're delivering, but for the customer, it's still a free heat pump, cylinder etc, so could be attractive. But the question would be, is there an umbrella scheme operator out there who will work with the client on the design? Or do they all insist on over-designing by a factor of two? Or is the over-design inherent in the MCS heat loss calculation methodology?
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Sorry, no I meant hybrid in the sense of the way we work. It'll be just an ASHP.
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Definitely a good solution and hats off to you for sorting that out. I'm not planning to DIY but am thinking about a hybrid arrangement with a guy who's a qualified plumber and electrician - Gas Safe, NICEIC etc. He's done work for me before and we get on well together. I'm more involved in the work than a typical customer and he's happy with that. We'll discuss what we need and he's happy for me to buy the kit and for him to install it. I value and respect his experience and occasionally I bring a different perspective. He's not MCS certified as he thinks it's a rip-off for something he's already qualified to do. For our self build, we've discussed him installing the heat pump under an umbrella scheme, but we haven't finalised that yet, hence my interest. This would be his first heat pump installation but he's up for that and interested in the project. Maybe I can buy the kit cheaply, as you have done, have him install it and I still get the grant. We can work this out so he and I both benefit. He's also interested in installing the PV, but that's another story!
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Coolenergy are not the only people offering an MCS umbrella scheme. If you do an internet search there are several others including for example this one from Vaillant. Does anybody have any thoughts about or experience with those?
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Great blog and nicely written. Regarding goggles misting up, the mist is tiny droplets of water condensing onto the lens. If you put something on the lens which breaks the surface tension of the water droplets, they all merge into a continuous layer, which you can see through. Dilute detergent or soapy water works. Dilute baby shampoo won't sting if it gets in your eyes. Licking the lens can also work .... depending whether you like the taste of dusty goggles!
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biodiversity Net Gain Exemption and LPA conditions!
LnP replied to Lincolnshire Ian's topic in Planning Permission
I think I posted Warrington's UU elsewhere, but here it is again. I'm not a lawyer, but a couple of differences I noticed: Warrington provide for the possibility that the self builder could be released from their obligations if their circumstances change. Unless I missed it, Dorset does not. The Warrington UU says: "PROVIDED THAT the requirements in paragraphs 4 and 5 shall not apply in the event of a change of circumstances acknowledged by the Council in writing acting reasonably which prevents the Original Owner from Occupying and/or not Disposing of the relevant Dwelling within such three (3) year period." I'd be thinking about ways in which my circumstances might change, for example my place of employment changes, I lose my job and have to move house, I need to move closer to aged parents, I get sick and need to move into care, etc. It looks like the Dorset UU would prevent me from doing that. In the Dorset agreement, your self build has to continue to be your "sole or principal residence" for three years. Does this prevent you from owning a second or holiday home? None of this is legally required by the Act or Regulations. The self build exemption is provided in The Biodiversity Gain Requirements (Exemptions) Regulations 2024. They very simply exempt self builders. And self builders are simply defined in the Self-build and Custom Housebuilding Act 2015, Local authorities are over-reaching their legal mandate. I continue to believe that the way they're implementing the self build exemption is outrageous. Warrington Self Build - draft UU26.9.24 - FORMATTED 16.10.2024 CLEAN (1).docx -
You can't beat the second law. Once you've converted the electricity (work energy) into heat energy, any device you design to get back to work energy can never get you back all the energy as work. Some energy will always be rejected as heat. The best you can theoretically do is a Carnot heat engine which has an efficiency of (Th - Tc )/Th - hot and cold temperatures in Kelvin. And there's no actual such thing as a Carnot engine. Yes, great if you can find a use for the rejected heat. I've got a fantastic energy project I think you might be interested in investing in ....
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At the moment, curtailment is usually because the grid doesn't have sufficient capacity. We should spend the money on increasing the capacity of the the grid so it can handle all the wind and solar, rather than expensive energy storage just because the grid can't handle it. Eventually though we will need storage to balance supply and demand. How to manage intermittency and curtailment was studied by the Royal Society and reported here, and indeed they found a potential use for hydrogen, i.e. renewable electricity via an electrolyser to hydrogen, stored in a salt cavern and back to electricity by a fuel cell or ICE and generator. It's expensive both in terms of capital cost and the round trip efficiency of 41%, i.e. you only get 41 kWh of electricity back for every 100 kWh of renewable electricity you put in. Back to my original point though, advocates of hydrogen who don't understand the thermodynamics will assume that we can improve on the 41% as we get better with electrolyser and fuel cell technology. I'm afraid lobbyists and parties with vested interests looking for subsidies, exploit this and persuade politicians that the economics will improve. We can't and they won't. These are second law losses and you can't beat the thermodynamics. Some people correctly argue that interconnectors, which were not included in the RS study, could be a better solution - you connect to renewable sources where the wind and sun blow and shine at different times. Interconnectors avoid second law losses. It all about the difference between the two types of energy, heat and work!
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Power is to work as speed is to distance 🙂. One is the rate of the other.
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I don't understand your point about enthalpy. Did you mean entropy? Either way, there are different ways to state the second law. I tried to make it simple and deliberately didn't bring entropy into it. I just saw something which was incorrect, is a common misconception and incorrect in a way which sometimes leads to poor energy policy making. So I hoped to straighten that out. A political example ... if our politicians understood this science better, they wouldn't be wasting tax payers' money on subsidising projects which use hydrogen as an energy vector, for example this one in Aberdeen, especially given that in Montpellier they already learned the hard way. Compare: Renewable electricity -> hydrogen (heat energy) via an electrolyser -> electricity via a fuel cell -> work energy via an electric motor .... or -> work energy via hydrogen internal combustion engine. Versus: Renewable electricity -> work energy via an electric motor in a BEV. Apologies if this has hijacked the thread!
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No. Heat and work are the two different types of energy, measured in Joules. Power is the rate of doing work measured in Joules per second. A J/s is a Watt. The first law (conservation of energy) is easy. The second law is tricky. Politicians don’t understand it which is one reason why we get incoherent energy policies.
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Actually not correct. Second law of thermodynamics, there are two types of energy, heat and work. Work can be converted completely into heat; but heat cannot be converted completely into work, the best you can theoretically achieve is a Carnot heat engine. Fossil fuels provide heat energy and electricity provides work energy. The second law is not well understood but important in the context of plotting a course to net zero.
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biodiversity Net Gain Exemption and LPA conditions!
LnP replied to Lincolnshire Ian's topic in Planning Permission
Is this because the BNG gains cannot be legally secured through a 30-year monitoring plan in a private garden? @Benpointer, so what are you going to do? What conditions are in the proposed S106 agreement? I'm more concerned about ecologists setting up biodiversity offset sites, because they on the one hand tell you how many points you have to buy and on the other sell you the points. A clear conflict of interest. This is a mess. -
biodiversity Net Gain Exemption and LPA conditions!
LnP replied to Lincolnshire Ian's topic in Planning Permission
@Benpointer Since you have plenty of space to add the 10% biodiversity points, you might be better off foregoing the self build exemption, with its associated costs and S106 restrictions. I’ve heard a habitat survey and assessment costs about £2k. Its another irritating and unnecessary professional fee, but being pragmatic, maybe the BNG self build exemption is more trouble than it’s worth. -
+1 for FH Brundle. If you open an account you can sometimes get a discount.
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biodiversity Net Gain Exemption and LPA conditions!
LnP replied to Lincolnshire Ian's topic in Planning Permission
... not to mention the costs you'll incur to implement and monitor the S106 agreement. Have they told you how much that will be? It seems some LAs are using UUs and some S106 agreements. Maybe some are still accepting a signed letter declaring yourself as a self builder. I'm not familiar with S106 agreements, but will the agreement prevent you from selling your house for a period of time, e.g. 3 years, after completion? Do you need finance for your build? If so, what does your lender say about this restriction? I've heard some lenders won't accept it. It's worth considering whether it might be cheaper and easier to do the BNG assessment and agree to the mitigations required to achieve the 10% net gain. Be careful though if you go this route. I recently saw a small garden plot where the proposed house would cover most of the plot and leave very little space for adding biodiversity. So they needed to buy offsets to replace the lost biodiversity points and the required 10% additional. The ecologist company which did the assessment also operates a biodiversity offset bank and were - surprise, surprise - more than happy to offer to solve the builder's problem by selling them offsets ...... for £36,000!! It's a huge conflict of interest with no checks and balances. So if you decide not to avail yourself of the self build exemption, it might be better to use an ecologist who is not selling offsets. LAs say they are ensuring that sneaky commercial builders are not dishonestly using the self build exemption. But the number of self build planning applications is tiny. Is it really necessary to go to these lengths and in many cases close the door on the exemption. How the self build BNG exemption should work has not been thought through and is unfair to self builders. -
I wanted to paint a screeded workshop floor. The small print on the solvent based floor paints I looked at said they weren't suitable for screed, only suitable for concrete. So I went for the two part epoxy paint. Yes it was expensive and you have to discard your rollers and brushes afterwards, but I preferred to do the job once. It's been down a couple of years now and is holding up wel ... l and I like the high gloss finish 🙂 . I've dropped things on it and it hasn't chipped.
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LPA requesting extension. Any pearls of wisdom?
LnP replied to flanagaj's topic in Planning Permission
Are you claiming the self build exemption from having to demonstrate biodiversity net gain? If so, are the LA doing anything to prevent you from subsequently selling? My LA require us to sign a unilateral undertaking and will put a charge on the house to prevent us from selling in 3 years from completion. -
Why so?
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I've got a Eufy door bell, an inside camera and an outside camera, all battery powered and connected to a local hub by wifi. I don't have subscription cloud storage. I recognise that the bad guys could take the hub and I will have lost my evidence. But the main problem I have with it is that if I'm away from the house and get an alert, I rarely have good enough mobile phone network connectivity to view the stored event or even the live camera feed. Do the cloud based systems do any better than this? My broadband speed is typically 40 Mbps download and 20 Mbps upload. Btw, the battery life on the outside camera is very poor.
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Unauthorised roof built by mechanic behind my home - help please
LnP replied to hamburgers's topic in Planning Permission
Check if your house insurance includes legal cover. They might support you in taking legal action against your neighbour. -
German kitchen brands - Nobilia, Bauformat or Leicht?
LnP replied to Indy's topic in Kitchen Units & Worktops
We've done: bespoke supply and fit and hand painted in situ (expensive); German brand supply and fit (medium price;) and good local joiner fitting trade cabinets (cheapest). Getting a good local joiner to install trade cabinets is how we will do our next kitchen. The joiner we used was able to adjust the trade cabinets so it was almost like a bespoke and the whole experience was very agreeable and a good looking kitchen. We know people who have had supply and fit (e.g. Wickes and Wren) where there have been real problems with the fitting and project management. The fitters these companies use are driven by getting the cabinets fitted in the time they've been allocated and paid for. When they hit inevitable snags, for example the design isn't quite right, they just want to get the cabinets in and get away, never mind the quality. Very stressful. -
>>Tice argued net-zero policies were to blame for higher energy bills<< >>Reform would recover money paid in subsidies to wind and solar companies<< The cause of high energy bills in the UK isn't subsidies, it's marginal pricing - setting the price of electricity at the marginal highest cost generator, which is natural gas. If the government wants to bring electricity prices down they need to break the link with natural gas.
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Kitchen appliances..... decision options
LnP replied to dan_cup's topic in Kitchen & Household Appliances
It's worth looking at Ikea kitchen appliances. We recently installed an Ikea induction hob and are pleased with it. 25% cheaper than a Neff.
