Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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Posted By: georgiegirldue to having an annexe with a shared meter I don't know what our kWh heat demand actually is.It would probably be fairly simple to have a sub-meter put in to measure the annex's consumption. Or even a CT clamped around the cable (Current Transformer) would give a good idea.
I'm thinking that during the summer a diverter could take excess from our PV array to heat the top of the store for evening showers. Central heating won't be required so the bottom immersions aren't needed. When its cold enough to switch the heating on the bottom immersions would be activated and heat the tank at the cheap rate. Does this sound like it could work? Alternatives that don't involve heat pumps?We have a very similar arrangement. Our house is a passivhaus so has a low space heating demand met by direct electric heating. We heat our hot water using a Gledhill thermal store with two immersions. The bottom one is connected to a diverter that diverts spare energy from our 4 kW PV system. It is set to a high temperature to maximise storage capability. The top immersion is fed from the mains through a timeswitch and is set to a lower 60°C temperature. That provides enough hot water in the winter for our two showers a day plus all other domestic needs. It doesn't use any power in the summer because the water is already above 60°C because of the solar diversion.
Posted By: georgiegirlAlternatives that don't involve heat pumps?
Posted By: tonyIt will work, yes but it might be expensive and you will almost certainly end up using peak rate electricity to heat your home in cold weather.
Electricity is 100% efficient at heating, off peak can be 1/4 the price of peak rate electricity but there will be some losses from the store 30 to 50%
A heat pump can be 350% efficient with no losses. What do you have against heat pumps?
Posted By: djhPosted By: georgiegirldue to having an annexe with a shared meter I don't know what our kWh heat demand actually is.It would probably be fairly simple to have a sub-meter put in to measure the annex's consumption. Or even a CT clamped around the cable (Current Transformer) would give a good idea.I'm thinking that during the summer a diverter could take excess from our PV array to heat the top of the store for evening showers. Central heating won't be required so the bottom immersions aren't needed. When its cold enough to switch the heating on the bottom immersions would be activated and heat the tank at the cheap rate. Does this sound like it could work? Alternatives that don't involve heat pumps?We have a very similar arrangement. Our house is a passivhaus so has a low space heating demand met by direct electric heating. We heat our hot water using a Gledhill thermal store with two immersions. The bottom one is connected to a diverter that diverts spare energy from our 4 kW PV system. It is set to a high temperature to maximise storage capability. The top immersion is fed from the mains through a timeswitch and is set to a lower 60°C temperature. That provides enough hot water in the winter for our two showers a day plus all other domestic needs. It doesn't use any power in the summer because the water is already above 60°C because of the solar diversion.
I haven't been able to justify the cost of installing and maintaining a heat pump yet, given our low heat demand. Losses from the thermal store in winter aren't really losses at all since they are picked up by our MVHR extract and recycled into the air supply, avoiding some of the space heating demand. During summer the losses are from free PV power and the heat is dumped by the MVHR summer bypass so it isn't a problem then either. WE use an E7 tariff at present.
What is best for you will depend on exactly what your space and water heating demands are.
Posted By: Doubting_ThomasPosted By: georgiegirlAlternatives that don't involve heat pumps?
Just to throw something else into the mix, we are all electric and passivhaus like djh above. However we are using a thermal battery to absorb our excess PV. Specifically SunAmp, though I think there may now be others available.
This uses a phase-change salt material to store the heat which is more 'energy-dense' than water, so sits in a smaller footprint than the equivalent water tank would need to be.
Generally it has been a mixed-bag for us. Being early adopters we bought direct from the manufacturer and thus have suffered both from a lack of post-sales customer support and the fact that one battery is, in retrospect, undersized and doesn't deliver enough hot water for our needs.
Neither issue is something that would affect you necessarily, but it helps to be informed! Now we've had it for 5 years, my only other observation would be that it should work well with a PV battery because you can spread out the charging profile through the day.
Generally the 'guilt-free' hot water in summer is a real benefit and I'm happy we went for this route rather than a direct electric 'zip' heater for example.
Posted By: georgiegirlHow do you provide heating?
Posted By: georgiegirlThanks, nothing against heat pumps, but I understand they can't work with a thermal store and that's ideally what I want.I don't understand that. It sounds like nonsense. What's the supposed reason for that particular idea?
Great to hear that you have a similar set up, but interesting that you have the immersions functioning they other way around. I've spoken to a couple of thermal store suppliers and they are suggesting that I will need a very large store in order to compensate for the store not being heated by a 24kw boiler. However, as we have also got approx 70m2 of underfloor heating being installed thatthe volume can be reduced as heat will be stored in the slab.Our thermal store is 250 L. That provides enough hot water for two or three days for the two of us from a single sunny day. It only supplies DHW, not space heating. What is 'a very large store'? And why does it need to be larger if you don't have a 24 kW boiler?
Posted By: georgiegirlThanks, nothing against heat pumps, but I understand they can't work with a thermal store and that's ideally what I want.I'm inclined to think the opposite, but I seem to be in a minority.
.What is 'a very large store'? And why does it need to be larger if you don't have a 24 kW boiler?
Go back to basics. What is your heat loss and DHW consumption? Put in another meter and find out.
Posted By: georgiegirlI don't have time to put in another meter as building work is imminent.Alarm bells are ringing. Doing building work when you don't know basic details nor exactly what you are aiming for is a recipe for disaster. Wasted money and poor results perhaps.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenNo point metering your existing consumption patterns if you're just about to insulate.There is a point in being able to monitor energy consumption going forward, and there is a point in measuring current consumption so as to be able to calculate the difference from a baseline. Starting from data is better than starting from theoretical calculations.
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