HughF Posted April 9, 2022 Share Posted April 9, 2022 I was googling what sort of control strategy I'd need if I shifted to an ASHP, my googling has led me to think that full weather comp, heating on 24/7 (which is fine, as the house is occupied almost 24/7 anyway), and the odd TRV to limit room temperature if required. Talking of TRVs - google brought up the ttached interesting article from back in 2011 by the EST. A little out of date (it mentions that most heat pumps are fixed speed, not inverter driven, which is now not the case). Sharing here in case it's of interest. 3531-effect-radiator-valves-heat-pump-perf.pdf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted April 9, 2022 Share Posted April 9, 2022 You need to balance the system well, but I would try to limit them as much as possible. Possibly bedrooms only. The basis of the article will still hold true, with modulation, you have a little more room for error. Then work out your system capacity, with those radiators with trv closed and make sure you either have a buffer big enough to cope. Problem is anything warmer than design, the end of the modulation range can still be too large a capacity for demand. Take a look at heatgeek.co.uk also, which has a few good write ups on system balance and how to best operate weather compensation. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HughF Posted April 10, 2022 Author Share Posted April 10, 2022 10 hours ago, JohnMo said: You need to balance the system well, but I would try to limit them as much as possible. Possibly bedrooms only. The basis of the article will still hold true, with modulation, you have a little more room for error. Then work out your system capacity, with those radiators with trv closed and make sure you either have a buffer big enough to cope. Problem is anything warmer than design, the end of the modulation range can still be too large a capacity for demand. Take a look at heatgeek.co.uk also, which has a few good write ups on system balance and how to best operate weather compensation. Depending on whether I have the space in a cupboard, or not, I was going to manifold the rads and balance them there. Originally the plan was to put wired actuator heads there (when I was considering a high temp system). We tend to have all the doors permanently open between rooms in this house, which would make TRVs pretty redundant, would it not? if I end up having to do everything under the floorboards then I’ll just do the usual plumbing setup with a bucket of Ts Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TW9 Posted April 10, 2022 Share Posted April 10, 2022 You're right, if you leave the doors open there's no point in using TRVs. In fact it can reduce your heat pump efficiency. Heat Geek explain why in one of their YouTube videos. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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