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Everything posted by ProDave
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So can we STOP calling it MAN MADE global warming. It wasn't us wot did it.
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wiring an electric only towel rail
ProDave replied to jugglesm's topic in Electrics - Kitchen & Bathroom
I am assuming the circuit you are connecting to already has, and if not as part of the additions to that circuit you would update the whole circuit -
Sorry the term I should have used is Absorption Fridge. This is how they work: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_refrigerator They are less efficient than a compressor fridge, but silent in operation. They are common in caravans as the heat source to make it work can be gas, 12V or 240V electricity so very versatile. Here is a 240V one designed for silent domestic applications https://www.amazon.co.uk/Barcool-Bar40-LED-Bedrooms-Guesthouses/dp/B0875NVX17/ref=sr_1_11?keywords=absorption+fridge&qid=1674297318&s=appliances&sr=1-11
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Better quality window furniture - UPVC windows
ProDave replied to HughF's topic in Windows & Glazing
A short term solution might be to swap the parts on the worn out window with ones from a seldom used window. Then it does not matter is the seldom used window is less than perfect. -
wiring an electric only towel rail
ProDave replied to jugglesm's topic in Electrics - Kitchen & Bathroom
Running horizontally or vertically from an accessory is a "safe zone" and the only places you are supposed to run cables. Some people seem to forget or not even know about the horizontal safe zones, as I found out once when I had a stand up finger wagging argument with a joiner trying to tell me I could not run a cable horizontally from one socket to the next. -
The trouble with penny pinching and going for 18mm if you have 400mm joists is where you meet the stairs, where every set I have seen the nose is 22mm thick.
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I installed a Grant ASHP this time last year on a new build being built for sale. I didn't do the plumbing and was not impressed with the plumber that did, he did not use blending valves or even pumps on the UFH manifolds, he just relied on the water pump inside the ASHP to push the water everywhere. But it did seem to work. I wired it according the the installation manual. It was very basic, a call for heat input and a call for hot water input, and the only controller used was the one Grant supplied. It all appeared to work but I never delved deeply into the finer details. but one thing that struck me was if you did a bit deeper than the basic "how to connect it" instructions, is there are a lot of additional inputs and outputs and a lot more things it can do, but most not very well explained.
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A problem we have at the moment is just about every heat pump has a TOTALLY different way of connecting to the required controls and by default only operates from it's own supplied controller which tends to be a non intuitive grossly over complicated and awkward thing to use, such that the average home owner has no hope of even adjusting the time settings. In my own case I left the manufacturers controller as an object of curiosity in the plant room and integrated the system to a standard central heating programmer on the wall of the utility room. A user interface that most home owners are familliar with and they can easily turn heating and hot water on and off and program on and off times just as they have always been able to do with any heating system. But to do that was not easy as there was no hard wired hot water on and off input with my heat pump, so I had to fudge my own interface to allow the hot water to be enabled or disabled by something else. And the wiring is totally different between one make of heat pump and another. So an electrician going to wire the system if he has not done that one before he first has to read, digest and understand the manual. Only then can he work out what cable is needed between the inside and the heat pump sitting outside. You don't have this problem with a gas or oil boiler, they are virtually all the same control interface, permanent supply, call for heat, call for hot water etc. It would be good if the heat pump manufacturers could bang their heads together and come up with at least some standardisation.
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Great stuff. I love reading this sort of topic. I guess the next thing is try it on your real boiler. If it works you just have to set the Pi to send the required temperature each time you change from heating to hot water. Storage temperature might be some combi boilers keep a small store of hot water internally for faster response to a hot tap being turned on.
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Buying large kitchen appliances in advance
ProDave replied to Seren161's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
I bought my ASHP from a business seller on ebay. It sat in my part built house for 11 months until I finally installed it, only to find it did not work. I got it replaced, but it took a fight. What a damned good job it was only 11 months after the purchase before I installed it not 12+ months. -
Heating "engineers" that UNDERSTAND any form of heating are in short supply. Most will wire a standard S plan or Y plan heating system with a standard boiler by connecting the wires according to their colour in a standard wiring centre from the standard drawings. If it then does not work, they are stumped. If there is just one thing a little out of the ordinary they are stumped. I have lost count of how many wrongly wired / not working heating systems I have found and had to correct. And none of them understand a 3 port mid position valve and know the symptoms if it has failed and the heating or hot water has stopped working.
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The real "fault" is the bath design. A completely flat top. In a previous house we had a more styled bath, there was a slight raised edge right on the outside with the rest sloping down very slightly to the bath. Never had any problems because water naturally drained away from the edge and the shower screen seal therefore did not need to do much work.
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wiring an electric only towel rail
ProDave replied to jugglesm's topic in Electrics - Kitchen & Bathroom
Yes fit a Fused Connection Unit for the towel rail with a 3A fuse in it. And a switch outside the shower room to turn the towel rail on and off, then just a flex outlet plate inside the room to connect the towel rail heater. Re sealed system, you are supposed to leave an air gap at the top i.e. don't fill it to the brim with water. -
So will this do for a temporary consumer unit?
ProDave replied to CalvinHobbes's topic in Electrics - Other
Yes. Worst I saw was an old kitchen wall cabinet on a post with a bit of roofing felt tacked on the top and the DNO were happy. -
Self use is king. Since i installed my PV, I have exported 334kWh. If I had been paid for that at 5p I would have been paid £16.70 Even some of the more realistic rates like 15p would only have earned me £50.1 I will let someone else calculate how long it would take to repay the "MCS premium" to enable me to claim that pittance.
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Acronyms, Abbreviations & Glossary Of Common Terms
ProDave replied to ProDave's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Eaves level- 54 replies
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Using a PV energy diverter to heat a hot water tank.
ProDave replied to Marvin's topic in Electrics - Other
But for those that didn't want to pay for an MCS install, and / or do not for various reasons want a smart meter, there is no SEG payment available. -
It looks like at least part of your upper floor is above the garage? While heat going down from upstairs into a room below would not be "wasted" any such heat going downwards into the garage would be. Also with that portion of the upper floor above a garage, it is likely there will be air paths due to leaks etc allowing the cold air from the garage to the inter floor space. I suspect the solution lies with taking it all up again and doing it properly, making sure the entire ceiling above the garage is properly air tight sealed and properly insulated, then re fit the UFH. With carpet is is likely you will need the UFH pipes closer together than the downstairs UFH. Probably not what you want to hear.
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Completion Certificate obtained - finally
ProDave replied to Happy Valley's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Most of us have a "to do after completion" list......... -
The best thing we did with our static was install a multi fuel stove, it burned wood in the day and coal over night. We lit it in November and it hardly went out until March. We survived the winter with the "Beast From the East" in that. Only had 1 frozen pipe, where the mice had eaten about 12" of pipe insulation leaving a bare pipe. Crawling under the 'van with a hairdryer and extension lead during a blizzard.
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Do you have a close up picture of a "plinthe" I take it is is more than just a row of contrasting coloured tiles? does it stick out? perhaps thicker tiles etc?
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So what is the grey strip at the moment? I would expect floor tiles down first right to the very edge of the room, then wall tiles down to the floor tiles and grouted. If the grey we are seeing is the tanking membrane, then you should still be able to fit the bottom row of the same tiles, but they all may need cutting unless they anticipated that and left exactly the right gap.
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Turning our heat pump off over summer and a general moan
ProDave replied to RogerH's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
My LG heat pump controller seems to take all summer to consume 1kWh doing nothing.
