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. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: GarethCSay I installed a top notch A++ rated air conditioning multi split system, thereby reducing my heating related emissions significantly. Am I right that, due to the (almost certainly unused) ability to cool, I wouldn't even get an uplift to my home's EPC?
Posted By: owlmanIn my own home I installed an A/A ducted system in a large open plan area, ( I had the available space in the loft above), so it made sense to go the extra mile. I accept that not everyone does, but the various wall units are so efficient and some with filtration the A/A option is an excellent choice.
The guts of the systems are simple robust technology with fast response and excellent controls. As for cooling, I've had mine installed for 3 years and it's the best form of CH I've experienced. During that time I've probably run the cooling facility on about 5 or 6 occasions and then only for a few hours, the cooling is TOO efficient to have it on longer. and on the days it's been on, my solar PV has more than powered it.
Posted By: owlmanIn my own home I installed an A/A ducted system in a large open plan area, ( I had the available space in the loft above), so it made sense to go the extra mile. I accept that not everyone does, but the various wall units are so efficient and some with filtration the A/A option is an excellent choice.
The guts of the systems are simple robust technology with fast response and excellent controls. As for cooling, I've had mine installed for 3 years and it's the best form of CH I've experienced. During that time I've probably run the cooling facility on about 5 or 6 occasions and then only for a few hours, the cooling is TOO efficient to have it on longer. and on the days it's been on, my solar PV has more than powered it.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenIf your heatpump is in the database
Posted By: GarethCtowering absurdity of current policy.
In fact, come to think of it, it's even worse
Posted By: GarethC
Basically, if they recognised the impact on space heating emissions of installing high efficiency A/A heatpumps, they at a stroke introduce a relatively affordable, -relatively- low disruption means of lowering space heating emissions by probably at least as much as A/W heat pumps (taking into account potential use for cooling), so what on earth is not to like?
Posted By: philedgePosted By: GarethC
Basically, if they recognised the impact on space heating emissions of installing high efficiency A/A heatpumps, they at a stroke introduce a relatively affordable, -relatively- low disruption means of lowering space heating emissions by probably at least as much as A/W heat pumps (taking into account potential use for cooling), so what on earth is not to like?
Maybe Im missing something but as a boiler replacement option, A2A HPs seem a potentially expensive and disruptive option!! As I understand things youve got a choice of a central unit with ducting or individual units per room.
With a ducted system retrofitting ducting means floors up/ceilings down and structural alterations to floor joists where ducts have to pass through them. It maybe possible to work round the occupants but likely they would have to move out while the ducting goes in.
For individual room heaters theres likely a need for a unit per room or maybe some adjacent rooms can share a unit?? Even so a typical 3 bed house would likely need 5/6 units each needing an isolator/cable installing.
For both systems DHW with point of use heaters cables/isolators need running to all points of use and these could be quite substantial loads for bath/shower heaters. Once the system is in, the redundant boiler, DHW cylinder, pipework, radiators all need stripping out, making good and redecorating.
Assuming Ive understood A2A options correctly, it seems to me that an A2W system is a better fit for retrofit boiler replacements???
Posted By: WillInAberdeenNew pipes, like microbore plumbing, but with thicker walls and flared connections and insulation of OD perhaps 20-30mm. There's also a comms/power cable, and if it's used for cooling there will be a condensate drain pipe. All run behind linings, or in fat trunking if run on the surface.
Edit AIUI the refrigerant pipes cannot just tee off to different indoor units - instead each indoor units is connected radially from the outdoor unit, or possibly from a manifold unit, so piping will get congested near there.
Posted By: djhInteresting point I just read. If you convert a gas boiler to hydrogen, you'll need to replace all the radiators with larger ones, just like for a heat pump. The reason is that a hydrogen boiler produces water vapour and that needs to be condensed, just as it is in a gas boiler, in order to achieve high efficiencies. And since the energy density of hydrogen is less, efficiency is important. Unfortunately, to condense all the water vapour you'll need to reduce the flue temperature and hence the radiator temperature. Oops!
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryAnd heat pump is available now - if the grid can cope with wholesale installation of heat pumps.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenIn a hydrogen boiler, nearly all of the combustion oxygen goes into making water vapour, versus a natural gas boiler where half the oxygen makes CO2 and only half makes water. So the hydrogen boiler exhaust should contain more water, so condense more easily and have a higher dewpoint than a gas boiler's exhaust
Personally I think it would be a brave politician who approves hydrogen in the gas mains, as energy bills will have to go up as a result and the opponents will point this out. Hydrogen is inevitably going to be more expensive than the natural gas or electricity which are the starting ingredients for making it, so people will find it cheaper to use electric heating, in some form or another.