Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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Posted By: WillInAberdeenI'd suggest to select a sensor by its flow measurement range and resolution/accuracy, rather than by the size of the end fittingsI appreciate your input, but I only need a general idea not precise measurements and I am more concerned over pressure loss. So reducing to 15mm for instance is not an option.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenIf you need to know when the hot cylinder is being depleted, then use your thermocouples at different heights up the cylinder, or strap on a few more.Currently 8 sensor on the tank (in pre-fitted pockets recording every 10s) and this doesn't tell me quickly enough. There is also a lag between the boiler starting and having an effect on the tank, that lag is what I am trying to reduce. I could kick in at a higher temperature, but I maintain the tank at a lower temperature during the day. I also want to stop the boiler if the shower stops so it doesn't overshoot.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenLook at the rate-of-change-of-temperatureTried that - really doesn't help as the rate of change is about the same for a sink, but happens over a shorter period, but the ROC tends to overshoot. It also depends on how recently the boiler fired (as the water from the boiler is hotter so kicks the tank quicker on start.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenAny turbine sensor will use up pressure from the flow because it has to squeeze the flow into a jet to spin the turbine. Ifyes. I had the impression the Sika one was a hall effect, rather than a turbine. As I say, it is the fact it is flowing that is important not the rate or volume measurement.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenThanks for sharing the data! There is something interesting with the primary circuit from the boiler to the cylinder, the temperature of "tank to boiler" kicks up immediately after the boiler switches off, could it be siphoning backwards?No, there is a load valve close to the boiler so the water in the pipes to/from the boiler circulate and heat before being dumped back into the tank (else you get a cold 'slug' dumped into the tank). The water to the boiler is also blended so the minimum temp to the boiler is 40°C to help the boiler reach a better delta quicker. There is a little bit of the effect of the heat in the tank transferring via the pipework to the sensors (they are close to the tank). I think the effect when the boiler switches off, is heat transfer from the tank along the pipework as the cooler flow stops and the water stratification settles.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenMeasuring pipe temperature to infer that the shower is running, seems attractive but it could be difficult to detect when the shower is switched off again,Yes, precisely my issue.
Posted By: cjardI did also have an alternative wondering whether you could just put an infrared sensor on the shower area angled so out can't see people standing in the other places; it's rare for someone to stand in a shower cubicle and not be showering.. it only provides on/off but that might be all that is required. Or what about an open/close sensor on the shower door?The main shower doesn't have a door (I'd totally recommend that - one this less to break - and there isn't really anywhere for a movement sensor that would make sense.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenA hall effect sensor is a variety of turbine sensor, the sensor uses the magnetic hall effect to count the rotations of the turbine.I looked at exactly that one but I felt the construction simply not robust enough to put on effectively incoming mains pressure water!
Posted By: WillInAberdeenThanks for sharing, this is interesting stuff!The cold water slug issue became apparent, when I started measuring the tank temps and this effect made a noticeable difference to the hot water available at that point.
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