JohnMo Posted August 9 Posted August 9 A PHE need approx 1/3 to 1/2 the area of a normal cylinder coil to do the same job. Mainly due to the turbulent floe within the phe compared to almost static flow in the cylinder. When I was doing hybrid heating against a 3m² coil I was heating cylinder to 50, it would overshoot to 52. But boiler flow temp never went above 55. 1
marshian Posted August 9 Author Posted August 9 54 minutes ago, JohnMo said: A PHE need approx 1/3 to 1/2 the area of a normal cylinder coil to do the same job. Mainly due to the turbulent floe within the phe compared to almost static flow in the cylinder. When I was doing hybrid heating against a 3m² coil I was heating cylinder to 50, it would overshoot to 52. But boiler flow temp never went above 55. This is exactly my aim - minimal overshoot at the top of the tank - whole cyl heated to almost same temp at as low a flow temp as I can get away with in one burn cycle within the shortest time frame (ideally under 30 mins) If I can achieve that with current 13 year old copper tank (where I know my losses are still higher than a modern tank) then subsequent replacement of the tank for a more modern jacketed tank is hopefully only going to reduce the static losses and the efficiency of the HW heating isn’t going to change for the worse.
JohnMo Posted August 9 Posted August 9 5 minutes ago, marshian said: under 30 mins I was doing 210L in that time frame
marshian Posted August 9 Author Posted August 9 6 minutes ago, JohnMo said: I was doing 210L in that time frame Blimey!!!
marshian Posted August 9 Author Posted August 9 In other news Boiler had it's first service Gas turned off and disconnected from burner All electrical connections to burner and ignition removed Burner came out and it and the ignition electrode were cleaned Heating coil scrubbed with plastic spinny brush on a drill Burner re-fitted Condensate trap removed - emptied - cleaned and replaced (refilled with water) All removed connections checked - he found a loose/poor connection on the outside temp sensor so he cut back and re-did it. Boiler fired up and he repeated all the commissioning gas checks (hi and low flue gases) Boiler wasn't quite 1 year old and from arrival to leaving it was about 75 mins and £72 with the vat (he did say his service work is normally busiest in Sept and Oct and right now it’s fairly quiet for anything except new installs, mainly ASHP because of BUS grants) but I had the boiler purchased & fitted in July for the same reason I want any servicing to be outside the busy period. Scores on the doors from the boiler stats for one year Heating Demand Hours 4117 (171 days - I was initially heating to schedule and only moved to 24/7 in Dec 2024) Burner Hours 1917 Burner Starts 3965 Hours on CH 1683 Hours on HW 234 Average Cycles per day 11 (Summer HW process has driven down the average) Average Boiler Cycles per day in winter heating period 22
JohnMo Posted August 9 Posted August 9 Just found a trend I posted on another thread For clarity the boiler and heat pump were running, the boiler sat behind a plate exchanger and added heat to the ASHP flow. ASHP on its own takes nearly twice as long to heat cylinder. 1
John Carroll Posted August 9 Posted August 9 (edited) 5 hours ago, marshian said: Ideal world I’d like to achieve flow temp of less than 55 deg C and a target tank temp of 50 deg C with 115 litres of water at 25 deg C heated in a maximum of 30 mins max with one boiler cycle (ie it fires once and runs till stat satisfied - not cycle several times to achieve the target) In that case above, then a B8X20, almost 0.5m2, will output a minimum of 15kW with boiler flow/return temps of 55C/40C at a boiler flowrate of only 14.5LPM/0.87M3/hr & secondary side inlet/outlet temps of 25C/50C at a flowrate of 8.7LPM/0.52M3/hr, to heat 115L from 25C to 50C in 25 minutes assuming the cylinder stat is located just above the cylinder outlet to the PHEX inlet. Edited August 9 by John Carroll
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