Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: PFFNow a pressure relief valve i didn't know about. I know we need a drain at the lowest point but i thought venting up to the F&E tank would deal with any excess pressure from overheating?
Posted By: PFFGood to hear loading valves/thermostats etc... not necessary on gravity circuits :)
Posted By: PFFI had initially considered an indirect unvented cylinder (i'm assuming you mean unvented?) but had ruled it out after reading about not using an unvented cylinder with solid fuel systems
Posted By: ringi(When heating the unvented cylinder from a thermal store, the pump can be wired var the safety thermostat.)
Posted By: ringiHowever you can also build a platform in the loft for the cold water tank, as it is the height of the cold water tank over the shower that is important
Posted By: ringiRemember that shower pumps work and don't cost that much...... So a normal vented DWH cylinder that costs less then a unvented cylinder can be used with a pump. However you can also build a platform in the loft for the cold water tank, as it is the height of the cold water tank over the shower that is important, not the height of the DHW tank.
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneI'd suggest having the DHW via a heat exchange rather than a coil inside the cylinder. We have a heatbank and the solar PV in summer heats the water to 80C on a good day. The heat exchanger gives us mains pressure hot water at a set temperature with no risk of scalding. It's also drinkable, which is nice as there is no possibility of legionella and for those of us with sensitive teeth, it's nice to brush with lukewarm water ;)
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneI don't know what the advantages of a pressurised system is
Posted By: ringiWe have the "quartz digital pumped shower" greet solution if you only need one shower in the property much better control then any normal shower - mains pressure or otherwise. Should cost no more then £500 including the shower head etc, remember you don't need to buy a separate shower mixer.
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneIf you are fitting a thermal store, then you'd be taking the feed and return for the radiator circuit from the thermal store (except the overheat radiator).
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneI'd suggest having the DHW via a heat exchange rather than a coil inside the cylinder.
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneIt's also drinkable, which is nice as there is no possibility of legionella
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryPosted By: Pile-o-StoneIf you are fitting a thermal store, then you'd be taking the feed and return for the radiator circuit from the thermal store (except the overheat radiator).
In the diagram above the tank is 170ltrs which is DHW only. The rad circuit is designed for space heating which will only work when the stove is lit. A tank of 170ltr, in my book, can not be regarded as a thermal store.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryI would prefer to see - in preference order - 1) an indirect DHW tank either mains pressure or vented, 2) a direct tank with a heat exchange coil for DHW 3) a direct tank with a plate heat exchanger for DHW
Plater heat exchangers need extra controls and require a pump to run to get hot water and mix up the stratification (especially on a small tank)
Posted By: PFFIs stratification as important in a small tank directly fed from a stove and that's purely being used to supply DHW?
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