waxingsatirical Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 Please tell me I am wrong with my understanding of weather compensation. A compensation curve is setup which relates the outside temperature to the target flow temperature. Cold outside, high flow temp. Warm outside, low flow temp. So the internal temperature is not taken into account? If so, what happens when I light my 4kW wood burner? Does the heating system just merrily keep inputting as much heat as it assumes the house needs? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 2 minutes ago, waxingsatirical said: Cold outside, high flow temp. Warm outside, low flow temp I think it also takes the ΔT between the flow and return into account. So it is really measuring two temperatures, and adjusting the flow rates/output temperatures to govern the power. I may be wrong on that though. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan F Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 (edited) 1 hour ago, waxingsatirical said: Please tell me I am wrong with my understanding of weather compensation. A compensation curve is setup which relates the outside temperature to the target flow temperature. Cold outside, high flow temp. Warm outside, low flow temp. So the internal temperature is not taken into account? If so, what happens when I light my 4kW wood burner? Does the heating system just merrily keep inputting as much heat as it assumes the house needs? This the the case with basic weather compensation. Most manufacturers have some kind of "room temperature modulation" option which wil adjust the curve based actual room temperature. This approach helps adjust for solar gain and high wind as well. Edited November 25 by Dan F Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 Radiators or UFH? UFH as it's close to room temperature, will stop outputting heat, so self compensates to a decent amount. Radiators maybe less so, or not at all. If you had a trv on the radiators in or close to the stove, they would modulate flow down in response to room temperature increase. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beau Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 3 hours ago, SteamyTea said: I think it also takes the ΔT between the flow and return into account. So it is really measuring two temperatures, and adjusting the flow rates/output temperatures to govern the power. I may be wrong on that though. Thats how our old GSHP works Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 3 hours ago, SteamyTea said: I think it also takes the ΔT between the flow and return into account. So it is really measuring two temperatures, and adjusting the flow rates/output temperatures to govern the power. I may be wrong on that though. So if the woodburner or solar gain is heating the room the return temp will be high enough to stop the ASHP pumping? If so will the return from overheated rooms effectively redistribute heat a little to colder rooms? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan F Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 5 minutes ago, G and J said: So if the woodburner or solar gain is heating the room the return temp will be high enough to stop the ASHP pumping? If so will the return from overheated rooms effectively redistribute heat a little to colder rooms? Ours modifies flow temp based on room temp, not return temp! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted November 25 Share Posted November 25 1 minute ago, Dan F said: Ours modifies flow temp based on room temp, not return temp! Return temp is effectively, I presume, a weighted average of all rooms served by the UFH. So if you have a fire in one room do the others then suffer a temperature drop? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ReedRichards Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 (edited) 11 hours ago, Dan F said: Most manufacturers have some kind of "room temperature modulation" option Called "Load Compensation" in the context of gas boilers. 9 hours ago, G and J said: So if the woodburner or solar gain is heating the room the return temp will be high enough to stop the ASHP pumping? Not with radiators. You need a room thermostat set a couple of degrees higher than your desired room temperature to act as a backstop if you don't have Load Compensation. Edited November 26 by ReedRichards Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 Against popular current trends, we have a room thermostat in the 2 main downstairs rooms, so when you light the stove, if that room is not already up to temperature, it's thermostat will soon turn it off as the stove heats. We also have a conventional boiler time clock as a master control, if I am lighting the stove, I go and turn the heating off at that. Surely even the fans of pure WC operation must have some kind of master controls so your system is not running all the time in the shoulder seasons pumping water 1 degree warmer than the target temperature around the pipes? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 1 hour ago, ProDave said: Surely even the fans of pure WC operation must have some kind of master controls so your system is not running all the time in the shoulder seasons pumping water 1 degree warmer than the target temperature around the pipes? I shoulder season mine would circulate but just blast a bit of heat when needed. But ran a single thermostat in the hall as a temp limit. But if you are running weather comp on the correct curve, there should be no need to fire up the stove, because the house should be toasty enough already. Big fan of WC, but starting to migrate back to batch charging the floor, as using 30p electric when the battery runs dry over the last couple of cold weeks, started to get more expensive than it needed too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 19 minutes ago, JohnMo said: there should be no need to fire up the stove, because the house should be toasty enough already. This is of course the marmite subject on the forum. On a cold day, and particularly on a cold, wet dreary day, we like to indulge and fire up the stove, it heats the whole house hotter than we normally have the main heating set for, and we like to indulge in a bit of free extra heat. And then it is some time before the heating comes on again as the house cools down so a saving on electricity. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roundtuit Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 2 hours ago, ProDave said: This is of course the marmite subject on the forum. On a cold day, and particularly on a cold, wet dreary day, we like to indulge and fire up the stove, it heats the whole house hotter than we normally have the main heating set for, and we like to indulge in a bit of free extra heat. And then it is some time before the heating comes on again as the house cools down so a saving on electricity. Agreed. There isn't a 'need' as the ashp is more than capable, but lighting the stove and banging some extra heat into the house of a winters evening does lighten the load on the Smart meter the next morning. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 2 hours ago, ProDave said: free extra heat There are huge hidden costs though, even in the countryside. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
waxingsatirical Posted November 26 Author Share Posted November 26 Thank you all for your input. Presumably then, my system will be doing some kind of load compensation based on the return flow temp. If I set the thermostatic valves on the radiators, then as they turn off return temp will increase more quickly and the ASHP will be more responsive? Or is this a bad idea? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ReedRichards Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 (edited) 6 hours ago, waxingsatirical said: Presumably then, my system will be doing some kind of load compensation based on the return flow temp. Proper Load Compensation requires that your heat pump knows the target room temperature and the actual room temperature. When the actual temperature approached the target temperature it can modulate the heat pump down to a sufficiently low output to maintain the room temperature at the target value (or to minimum output if that is not possible). If the actual temperature falls far short of the target temperature it can boost the leaving water temperature so something higher than the value determined by Weather Compensation to warm the house more quickly (but possibly at the expense of efficiency). My Atag gas boiler bought in 1998 would do this; it's hardly a new thing. Edited November 26 by ReedRichards Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted November 26 Share Posted November 26 50 minutes ago, ReedRichards said: My Atag gas boiler bought in 1998 would do this; it's hardly a new thing. Definitely not new, but space age stuff to many (including the installer), where a boiler is installed ignoring all these features, because plumbers just wants to install S or Y plan with 70 Deg flow temps. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JamesPa Posted Friday at 10:54 Share Posted Friday at 10:54 (edited) On 26/11/2024 at 14:25, waxingsatirical said: Thank you all for your input. Presumably then, my system will be doing some kind of load compensation based on the return flow temp. If I set the thermostatic valves on the radiators, then as they turn off return temp will increase more quickly and the ASHP will be more responsive? Or is this a bad idea? Quite probably not, depends on make and how it is set up. With a heat pump you have to re-learn how to use heating controls because, stupidly (and unlike many more enlightened countries), the UK didn't implement weather compensation on our boilers, which has increased the running cost of our boilers by about 10% for many, possibly most people (I can explain why). In general dont set the TRVs - see below instead. if you tell us what make your heat pump is we may be able to give more specific help but... Basically you have four options, of which 3 are reasonably efficient and the fourth is definitely not unless you have UFH and are already operating at a low flow temperature, say 30C or less. 1. Operate pure weather compensation: Leave TRVs (or at least most TRVs/TRVs in the main rooms) and any room stat set at least 2C above the desired temperature so they operate as temperature limiters, and the main control is the WC. Balance rads. Adjust WC curve as low as possible consistent with keeping your house warm. Leave alone Trvs will shut down the room where you have the fire. 2. Operate room-sensor-tweaked weather compensation: Leave TRVs (or at least most TRVs/TRVs imn the main rooms) and initially any room stat set at least 2C above the desired temperature so they operate as temperature limiters,. Balance rads. Adjust WC curve more or less as low as possible consistent with keeping your house warm, aiming to get it within a couple of degrees of the 'ideal' (which is scenario 1). Then use one pure on/off room stat or better still the heat pumps internal sensor (but NOT any room stat that attempts to be smart by applying a pulse width modulated signal to the heat pump) to control. This will result in long on cycles and short off cycles when its cold, and will be ~3-6% less efficient than (1) depending on how close the curve is to (10 3. If your heat pump supports it, operate in adaptive/AI/Smart mode (terminology differs - and this feature is NOT available on some heat pumps including Samsung, Midea and several others) Leave TRVs (or at least most TRVs/TRVs in the main rooms) and any room stat set at least 2C above the desired temperature so they operate as temperature limiters, and the main control is the Heat pump. Turn off adaptive mode. Roughly set up a WC curve according to the recipe in (1). Make sure that the bit of your heat pump controller with the temperature sensor (usually the one with the flashy UI) is in a suitable reference room). Turn on adaptive mode 4. Operate at fixed flow temperature using a room stat to turn the heat pump on/off like a (UK) boiler Unless you have UFH and are already operating at say 30C flow temperature, this is 20-30% less efficient than any of the above and may cause flow rate errors if you also have lots of TRVs. Not recommended. Hope that helps, Im sure if you tell us about your heat pump and which of the above you prefer people can give you some guidance. Once you get used to it you will most likely find that the levels of comfort are higher with WC activated. This is because there will be reduced temperature gradients across the room and less up and down of temperature with time. Low temperature heating (which is the essence here and its not specific to heat pumps) is actually more comfortable for most, its unfortunate that our heating industry has been up till now/still is rather backwards compared to many other countries. Edited Friday at 11:19 by JamesPa 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted Friday at 13:05 Share Posted Friday at 13:05 I’ll have no. 1. for our installation please. As far as possible we want a fit and forget type cosy heating system. Can I do that alongside using three cheap rate periods of heating? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JamesPa Posted Sunday at 21:55 Share Posted Sunday at 21:55 On 29/11/2024 at 13:05, G and J said: I’ll have no. 1. for our installation please. As far as possible we want a fit and forget type cosy heating system. Can I do that alongside using three cheap rate periods of heating? Depends on your heat pump model. Pure WC should be fairly close to fit, adjust and forget, but adjustment may take several weeks or more. If your heat pump features an adaptive WC mode this should be closer with shorter adjustment time. Some heat pumps can be paired with external control eg homely, havenwise or the like. The first is, by repute, fit, forget and enjoy cost optimised operation. The second is a newcomer but can deal with Vaillant heat pumps which homely can't (but then Vaillant heat pumps feature a native adaptive WC mode). What do you have? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted Sunday at 22:52 Share Posted Sunday at 22:52 55 minutes ago, JamesPa said: Depends on your heat pump model. Pure WC should be fairly close to fit, adjust and forget, but adjustment may take several weeks or more. If your heat pump features an adaptive WC mode this should be closer with shorter adjustment time. Some heat pumps can be paired with external control eg homely, havenwise or the like. The first is, by repute, fit, forget and enjoy cost optimised operation. The second is a newcomer but can deal with Vaillant heat pumps which homely can't (but then Vaillant heat pumps feature a native adaptive WC mode). What do you have? We have a twinkle in an MCS plumber’s eye right now, we are planning ahead. Our plans will be vetted by BCO and SAP assessor in the next couple of weeks, so still lots of decisions to be taken. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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