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: owlmanWe grow Globe Artichokes and eat them fairly regularly in season. They are also quite decorative if you let a few go to seed and watch the thistle head develop.
We also grow first and second early spuds, and this year we've experimented with bog standard supermarket ones as seed, rather than buying dedicated seed. They're due for harvesting any time now - fingers crossed.
Posted By: Pile-o-Stonewe also added bamboo flooring - chosen because it's a renewable product, hard wearing and cheaper than oak!
We've therefore reached the point where we need to ventilate the house before we continue sealing it up.
Posted By: RobLLovely work!
Same mvhr we have, in same gable end location. Only mistake I made was to plumb the condensate straight outside. Every few years it froze up for more than a day causing a mini flood in the attic. Oops. I re-routed it into an internal waste pipe, which was a faff, but worth it.
Posted By: Pile-o-StonePosted By: RobLLovely work!
Same mvhr we have, in same gable end location. Only mistake I made was to plumb the condensate straight outside. Every few years it froze up for more than a day causing a mini flood in the attic. Oops. I re-routed it into an internal waste pipe, which was a faff, but worth it.
Hi Rob, It's good to know someone else on here has already installed this, just in case I have any questions! I also considered just plumbing the condensate through the gable end, but it's four stories up and very exposed, so I thought it best to attach it internally to the bathroom plumbing....
Posted By: WillInAberdeenAre you routing the intake and exhaust through the roof? (or up the chimney?!)
I was toying with the idea of the intake sucking air directly from the well-ventilated loft space, so saving one hole through the roof, and getting some free solar heating, but am unsure if is too dusty up there.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenAre you routing the intake and exhaust through the roof? (or up the chimney?!)
I was toying with the idea of the intake sucking air directly from the well-ventilated loft space, so saving one hole through the roof, and getting some free solar heating, but am unsure if is too dusty up there.
Posted By: djhOur condensate drain goes into the bathroom soil pipe. One point is to make sure to use a dry trap (hepVO or similar) since there are long periods with no condensation and there's no easy way to top up a wet trap.
I think expansion tank overflows need to be visible. They're ideally supposed to terminate outside in a visible place and failing that then like ours they need to go to a heat resistant (if hot water) tundish inside so they make noise and are easily visible. We had a ballvalve fail and the overflow was immediately noticed.
Posted By: bhommels My MVHR condensate runs from the loft down in the bath. I made it so that I can put a container under the pipe: a free (winter) supply of practically demineralised water
Posted By: Pile-o-StoneAfter the success of reducing my water usage with the solar stream pump, I was looking at rainwater harvesting sites yesterday. One of the solutions is 'gravity fed', where a tank is in the loft and it feeds the toilets and washing machine. I pondered whether it would be possible to feed the condensate into the rainwater loft tank, so it just doesn't get wasted down the drain.I suspect you might have trouble getting the levels right to allow the condensate to flow down to the top of the rainwater tank, but that will depend on your layout. I thought about incorporating such a rainwater header tank when we built, using a hand-operated bilge pump to pump water up to it from a collection tank nearer ground level (not too onerous if the pump is near the loo). But I gave up because of the labelling requirements and the need for a mains supply into the tank (in case of no rain) with a large vertical gap because of water regs but still float-controlled somehow. It all seemed too difficult :(