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ProDave

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ProDave last won the day on November 16

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About ProDave

  • Birthday 03/09/1963

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  • About Me
    Self builder in the Highlands, see my blog here <a href="http://www.willowburn.net" rel="external nofollow">http://www.willowburn.net</a> Heading for retirement, our "Adventure before Dementia"
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    Scottish Highlands

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  1. I am not aware my LG does. I have highlighted before, I have fitted about 4 different heat pumps, and every single one has a completely different electrical interface to the others. Unlike a basic gas or oil boiler that has power, and "call for heat" Isn't it about time the manufacturers banged their heads together and agreed on a single control interface so the installers only have to learn one scheme and it can be applied to all heat pumps?
  2. We have seasonally high water table. When i dug test pits for the SE to check soil conditions I left one open and observed anything from a dry 2m deep hole, to water almost up to ground level. I have mentioned before at our previous house I was badly advised and the guy that installed the tank just set it in pea gravel. That is still okay as long as you only empty it in the middle of summer after a long dry spell. It would probably end badly if emptied in the middle of winter. I made sure they buyer of that house was aware of the situation. Even now with the tank in this house concreted it, I choose only to empty it in the summer.
  3. It is a combi. Changing it for anything with a UVC would be my preference, I hate combi boilers. But then the whole plumbing in that house is lousy, so much of it irritates me. (see thread about not wanting to move from my nice self build where everything is just right) But my point is just adjusting the system she has, would make the house more comfortable, possibly reduce costs but certainly not increase them. I wonder how many swap from that to a well set up ASHP and praise how good it is, when a lot of that goodness could have been achieved simply by adjusting what was there?
  4. Most of that is not the ASHP but how the system is put together. I am just back from a week with a relative with a gas boiler and radiators. It has to be the worst set up install I have seen. (or perhaps I am just used to low temp UFH?) Her heating comes on for an hour in the morning, and hour at lunch time and a couple of hours in the evening. When it is on, the radiators run far too hot to touch, to the point you could easily burn yourself I think. You feel the hot air rising from them almost like a fan heater. So if you are close to the radiator you feel too hot, the other side of the room, not so. It is never on long enough to properly heat the fabric of the house, so when it goes off the house cools down quite quickly. The occupant just puts a cardigan on when it gets cold in the off periods. She only has it on for short periods because she is worried about cost. If the temperature was turned down a LOT the radiators would be warm, not scalding hot, and left on longer the house would probably be more comfortable for no extra cost. But so many people accept this scalding, too hot then too cold cycle as "normal" and never question it.
  5. I have 28mm formers for my Hilmor bender. It was originally my dad's. I also have the imperial sized formers for it. I don't have the electrical conduit formers though it is the same bender as electricians use so they are available.
  6. I am often asked should I swap from a gas boiler to an ASHP. I ask what are your expectations and reasons for doing so? If they just want to save money my usual reply is don't bother.
  7. Good idea, assuming the data centre owner pays the electricity it uses (so has it's own supply and meter?) and the host just gets the free "waste" heat.
  8. With a pipe bender I could do both 45 degrees as two bends in one length of pipe. No joints.
  9. Top immersion heaters are the work of the devil. If yours has an old style thermostat without the new safety cutout trip then they work apart from eratic water temperature. But when I was working I had no end of trouble with thermostat failure, and you can now only buy thermostats with the safety cut out, and they were notorious for spurious tripping when top mounted. I would 100% replace the cylinder with a new one with side entry immersion heater.
  10. I am not sad to see the end of this silly scheme, because it has failed to deliver low prices to the consumer and instead just let the contractors trouser most of the grant and still charge the customer a lot to fit a heat pump.
  11. Get a plasterer to skim that wall and paint it. If the cracks come back it is still moving. If not, the poor joining of dissimilar materials is hidden. Better still might be dot and dab plasterboard. Less chance of the cracks showing through. If the cracks are not showing on the other side of the wall then it is either not moving any more, or it has been recently filled and painted to hide it.
  12. Unless this property is special or particularly cheap, I would look for a different one to buy. Why take on such an unknown and possibly expensive risk unless it was cheap? A bit more context where this garage is in relation to the rest of the house might help? Is this the outer wall of an adjoined garage? The wall between the garage and the rest of the house etc? The joists suggest it might be an extension built above an existing attached garage and perhaps the foundations were inadequate etc.
  13. Yes that's what was on a previous static caravan (our first build) and once connected to our mains water, one by one they started bursting. No doubt they were old but it would not encourage me to use that type anywhere myself.
  14. Foam filled, white, 2.5M wide 2.7M high
  15. I bought mine from Rollerdor on ebay. Made to my size and delivered for about £500 Mine fits to the inside face of the opening not "in" the opening and is sized for that. It came with the door rolled onto the roller mechanism and the side rails separately. It was easy to fit but a 2 man job to lift the roller assembly into place. As well as electric opening with 2 remote controls, it can be opened manually with a handle from inside if needed.
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