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    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2011
     
    Indoor temperature 20.4 ; outdoors 4.5

    My surface temperatures in the late evening are:-

    Frame indoors 16.6 all round; sash 18.5; glass 17; reveal at coldest point 18.5

    Frame and sash outside 4.8 ; glass 7.9 varying to 5.6; reveal 4.8
    • CommentAuthorTimber
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011
     
    Not bad, but at 16.6 being the lowest temp you end up with an FRsi of 0.761, so quite close to the FCRsi of 0.75 in BRE IP 1/06.

    What does that mean in reality? I have NO idea!

    Timber
  1.  
    Are the frames insulated? Do you notice a pool of cold air on the floor below the window? In terms of thermal comfort this is the main thing that bothers me with my existing double glazing.

    David
    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011
     
    no cold spots or pools of cold only nice even temperatures

    the frames are insulated and the glass is 3g

    the frame area visible inside is only 10mm wide all the rest is sashes and glass and this will improve the calc leading to 0.76
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011
     
    Can you get meaningful info from temperature alone? Isn't measuring temperature like just measuring voltage in an electrical circuit (eg you can't work out the resistance or power loss unless you also measure the current).
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011 edited
     
    Temperature is meaningful as it is temperature difference over the thickness, can calculate an R-Value. Put time in and you can work out Watts and therefore Joules.
    Only need to know two things:
    Algebra and Laws of Indices
    All the rest is easy.

    If I get time I shall do mine (means I will have to stop doing the water for a day or two.
    But could ways go back to the 'Painting Your Roof White' thread of loads of data about glass, tile, tinfoil, paint, K Glass, newspaper.
    http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=5643&page=3#Item_8
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011
     
    Do you have any idea how I can 'backwards engineer' to find the u-value of my thermal blinds from the temperature difference across them for a steady state? External temperature 2.5C, internal temp 20C, temp just inside window (single-glazed Victorian sash) 7.5C, therefore temp drop through blind is 12.5C.... any clues? How to assess the surface resistances, if I need to? See technical info on www.thermalblind.co.uk for full report.
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2011
     
    Hi ecohome
    You can normally estimate window u values from the indoor glass temp, and indoor & outdoor ambient temps.
    I suspect that the blinds can't be guaranteed airtight though for this technique, so you should use outside temperatures, instead of the more usual indoor temperature ratios. With outdoor temperatures, you're at the mercy of how windy it is when you make the measurements. To get the most accurate data, I suggest you measure when it's still & cold & dark outside, and warm inside.

    As you can't guarantee how windy it is, so what the "effective U" value of the air is (shoot me down for using U here), you'll get more accurate estimates by doing this comparatively with another window.

    So...
    Find 2 windows that are similar, same side of house, same room temperature. One with the bind fitted, one without. Choose a cold day when it's not too blowy, that will make it most accurate. I'm guessing these are fitted to regular single glazed windoes, U=6 ish, so then:

    Measure the outside window temp without a blind (Tw), with a blind (Tb), and outdoor air temp(To). Take your time, I find the IR sensors take ages to "settle".

    (Tw-To) is proportional to the heatflow and hence the U, and we know this is 6.
    The proportionality needs indoor temp & how windy it is... but we're just using this as a ratio, so we don't need those figs.

    So I reckon the U value of your new window+blind is simply:
    6 * (Tb-To) / (Tw-To)

    Good luck !
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    Thanks RobL

    I'm not quite sure where you are suggesting I take measurements. In December I chose a still, cold day & took measurements over a six hour period on the same window, with the blind up for a period, then down for a period. I took temp measurements in 3 locations, inside the room, just outside the window & between the blind and the window. It reached a steady-state of sorts for each period, which I've graphed. So for one of the 'up' sessions the outdoor temp was 6C, though this was clearly influenced by heatflow from the building, ambient external temp was more like 3C at the time. The room temperature (but again quite close to the window & therefore 'influenced') was 19C & the temp closer to the window was 16C. With the blind down the external temp measured 2-3C (say 2.5C av), the room temp 20C & the 'between the window & the blind' temperature measured av. 7.5C.

    You can see a summary of this experiment here - http://bit.ly/tbtechni, showing the thermometer positions and the graph, with a link to a full report which includes photos.

    So for your calc, I'm not sure which of these figures I could use. I understand it will not be a completely accurate U-Value but its really useful for me to be able to estimate it without bullshit! (see my previous comments & concerns). I don't want to mislead.

    At the moment I'm only able to say "Although it was only 2.5ËšC outside, with the blind down the temperature behind the blind (just inside the glass) was around 12.5ËšC cooler than internal temperature, which was 20ËšC"..... which is a bit erm, long-winded.
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011 edited
     
    I've just realised I might be able to add images.... so here goes;

    the temperatures over time (yellow line just shows when the blind was up or down) & below that, thermometer locations.
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    Hi Ecohome
    it certainly looks like the blinds are affecting things very significantly.

    I think you can get a rough U value, but there are a couple of issues:

    Using different thermometers for the different measurements can lead to significant inaccuracies, as we're interested in small temperature differences. Most thermometers are +/-2C absolute accuracy, however they generally have resolutions and relative accuracies much higher than this (0.1C common). Imagine you had 2 thermocouples, one was +2C, the other -2C out ! (that would be very unlucky mind)
    You could calibrate them all together to largely remove this issue. Just stick them all in a large mug of water that's at ambient temp, and measure them all using your normal way (to take out all inaccuracies). Assume the mean value is correct, and add/subtract values from each one to calibrate to this mean. This won't take out gain differences, but they are usually less important. ***Have just read your report - are the thermometers mechanical ? Best not cal in water ! Still cal them together though ! I've always just used an IR thermometer in fact, as they are usually 0.1C relative accuracy, and cheap & easy to use.

    The air circulation will change when the blind is moved, so that the difference in thermometer measurements is down to both improved insulation, and also different air current flow paths. For the "technique of ratios" (tm) to work, we want all thermometers that are used to see the same circumstances for all tests. I don't think this will mess things up much though - I'm mainly worries about the thermometer relative accuracies above.

    I'd say that the temp difference from T2 to outside (a long way away outside) will give the best answer, of roughly:

    U_blind+window = 5.8*(7.5C-2.5C)/(16C-2.5C) = 2.1W/C.m^2

    I'm assuming that the room air temp (room centre) is stable, and that the outside air temp (long way from window) is 2.5C always. I've taken the standard U=5.8 for SG from Pilkington Spectrum.

    I think that to improve the accuracy:
    --I would use only one thermometer (or calibrate 2 together). You can see from the (7.5C-2.5C) in the calculation how dependant on that small temperature difference you are.
    --Measure outside air >1m from the house.
    --Then place the same thermometer (or a matched one) onto the inside face of the glass window. A tiny bit of blu-tak / sellotape is fine. Measuring the glass temp instead of air near it means changes in circulating air patterns due to the blind won't make any difference to the accuracy.

    The eq will be the same as I did above: 5.8 * ( Tblind_down - Tair )/( Tblind_up - Tair )


    Your blinds seem great ! We have many people in old houses in the UK unwilling to change their SG windows (like my parents, grrr), so I wish you all the best with these !
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    Hi ecohome
    Sorry I banged on about cal. I've just read that you did do that :-)

    RobL
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    Thanks Rob!

    That's really useful, now I think I'll repeat the test with the latest model (better internal fabric) & better thermometers (mine were extremely cheap!), properly calibrated together. I'm still prepping for the NPL hotbox test so hopefully that will give a more accurate, verified & comparative measurement. I'm now making them myself so its exciting to see it all beginning to work well. The first order for one of the Retrofit for the Future projects has been placed so I'll report back when they're fitted (being monitored via Wattbox / EST).
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    I have stuck up a couple of temperature loggers on my frame so should be able to report back tomorrow what is happening.
    Shame your not a bit closer as I could have lent you 3 loggers.
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    awww, thanks, I guess I should invest in some good ones myself really.....:smile:
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    This is the sort of IR thermometer I have at home - mine has a resolution of 0.2C, and an accuracy of +/-2C:
    http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Non-Contact-IR-Infrared-Digital-Thermometer-Laser-/260727087807?pt=UK_BOI_Electrical_Test_Measurement_Equipment_ET&hash=item3cb48ba2bf#ht_1112wt_905

    You point it at an object, and it measures the emitted radiation to work out the surface temperature. To do this it guesses the emissivity is 0.95, which is generally about right. To get best accuracy out of it you should avoid different surfaces with different emissivity - I point it at identical sticky white paper labels, that way you can easily get air temp measurements, and surface temp measurements with the same meter.

    My IR meter isn't very stable over long time periods..If it goes OFF, then ON, it may be 4C different !!.. I worry that in your blind up, then 30mins later blind down test, my cheap IR meter readings will drift. You could get around that by making two outdoor air temp measurements, one immediately after you do a window measurement. With this type, you'd have to do outside window surface (which is fine), as you can't get at the inside window surface without moving the blind.

    It is suprisingly difficult to make accurate temperature measurements. At my work we do this sort of thing, and usually resort to multiple thermocouples or PT1000, each with their own electronics, and each having a calibration delta T to add on to the indicated result.
    The most accurate temperature sensors are probably PT100 or PT1000, basically a length of platinum that changes resistance in a very precise way based on temperature. They're a real faff to use though.

    Spending more (£200), a thermocouple logger would be good - eg:
    http://uk.farnell.com/fluke/fluke-51-series-ii/thermometer-digital-fluke-51i/dp/3183361
    This one has 2 channels, and records them both. You'd want to get 2 identical thermocouples, and cal them together.
    Fleabay has much cheaper ones than that. Are they as good ? Dunno. Engineers trust the Fluke brand :-)

    If you want to use it for marketing, then it's probably worth getting better kit (>£100) & explaining what the kit was & how it was calibrated & used. If it's a look-see, then £20 on ebay will do just fine.
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    very interesting!

    I think I can wait for the NPL hot-box test I've got lined up (thanks to TSB) for accuracy, rather than cobbling something together myself. But I'm tempted to repeat the test over a more stable (internally) period, also with my new fabric & magnets - I guess I should test at the corner too where there is bound to be some air leakage.

    I'm toying with the idea (but this is distracting me from making the blinds!) of constant electronic monitoring, culminating in funky graphing & tweeting - the tweeting blind! This is something I'm concocting with my mate @andysc who has a house that tweets - water consumption, elec use, a power-pie showing what is going where, even a mouse trap that tweets when its caught one :tongue: ... see http://stanford-clark.com/house_that_twitters.html ... how about constant monitoring of the external & internal temps with eg. http://bit.ly/gZEAdo plus monitoring when the blind is up or down with a reed switch controlled by my stitched-in magnets? A PicAxe or Arduino controller, MQTT sending data online then I have my tweets! mad.

    PS. If you're going to Ecobuild, come & see me! I'll be here - http://bit.ly/ecoinnovate

    Katy
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    I just use iButtons, dirt cheap, accurate enough, but can be calibrated, and so easy to put anywhere and leave for up to a year (2048 datapoints at up to 255 minutes apart I seem to remember).
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2011
     
    So far I've avoided datalogging. It's a little bit like my work (electronics design engineer) , and I have so many insulation projects I want to do, that seem to take soooo looong anyway. I took 4 years celotexing the loft :-( Two young kids though :-)

    I have a friend at work who logs via I2C - USB to his PC, then he can log in & view data wherever he is. Most impressive. The irony of exactly measuring his planet saving measures with an always on PC...
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 6th 2011 edited
     
    Right this is what has happened down here the last few hours
    Will need a bit of juggling to make it look right. 4 columns, descriptor in columns 1,3 and results in 2,4.
    Just so you know the frame is 78mm thick, assuming pine (softwood anyway). No heating in this room over night and the window was open (was a warm night). Door to heating area was cold (probably see when I got up as turned the fan heater on for a bit.

    Outside Inside

    Mean 11.4 Mean 16.7
    Standard Error 0.0 Standard Error 0.0
    Median 11.5 Median 17.0
    Mode 11.5 Mode 17.5
    Standard Deviation 0.4 Standard Deviation 1.4
    Sample Variance 0.1 Sample Variance 1.9
    Kurtosis -0.9 Kurtosis -1.4
    Skewness 0.4 Skewness -0.2
    Range 1.5 Range 4.5
    Minimum 11 Minimum 14.5
    Maximum 12.5 Maximum 19.0
    Sum 13156.0 Sum 19348.5
    Count 1156.0 Count 1156.0
    Largest(1) 12.5 Largest(1) 19.0
    Smallest(1) 11.0 Smallest(1) 14.5
    Confidence Level(95.0%) 0.0 Confidence Level(95.0%) 0.1
      Door Frame.jpg
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 6th 2011 edited
     
    SteamyTea
    So is there a reason why the frame temperature dropped quite a bit when the external temp didn't drop so much?
    PS. sorry for hijacking your thread!

    RobL
    There are much lower power ways of logging than keeping a pc on, favoured seems to be a Viglen mini server thing.... can't recall the name but could find out.

    I'm a little confused by the variables in the calculation you suggest. If one should use the 'true' external temp a little further away from the window, then shouldn't you use the 'true' internal temp, so for the given options I get;

    window U / external / between / inside / blind U

    5.80 / 1.0 / 6.5 / 19.0 / 1.772 W/sq.mK (1C estimate of true ext. temp)
    5.80 / 2.5 / 7.5 / 16.0 / 2.148 W/sq.mK (this 16C was temp very close to glass)
    5.80 / 1.0 / 7.5 / 20.0 / 1.984 W/sq.mK

    I've graphed a section through the materials with the three thermometer positions marked:
      temp graph.jpg
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 6th 2011 edited
     
    Posted By: ecohomeframe temperature dropped quite a bit when the external temp didn't drop so much?

    Yes, looking at the times and knowing what I was up to and what my lodger was up I can suggest that she was cooking supper (hot meat pie on the side Watson) and I got home about 9pm and opened the window (problem cooking in an airtight house, gets full of smell and condensation). Window stayed half open all night reducing the delta T (the sensor part of the iButtons was actually on the timber and then gaffer taped over).
    Turned fan heater on about 7:30 this morning as was in kitchen (where I work) and felt a bit chilly (it was 14.5C after all and it used about 1.5 kWh Not been on since to best of my knowledge).

    So to answer the question about why it dropped is because heat was leaking out through the frame, what I would expect to happen and probably if looked closer at it would find that it was an exponential decay (which in ideal lab conditions it would be very close to). May see if I can look at that a bit closer for you.

    Like your blind design, can you make them washing machinable (kitchen fat, smell, flying food) and no more that a maximum of an inch thick when in the 'up' position then I could fit one to the back door and open it property.
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 6th 2011
     
    Hi ecohome
    I'll try & justify the temp points I think you should measure (glass & far external ambient):

    The power loss from a surface is proportional to the temperature of the surface compared to the ambient surrounding air. Take ambient to mean so far away, that the window doesn't affect it. It's hard to say what the coefficient of proportionality is in any given instance, as in this case it depends on wind conditions as it's done outside. As you're doing a before & after windowblind test, we can just divide one deltaT by the other, and multiply up by the U *that we already know* is the correct answer in the single glazed case. Thus we neatly divide out the unknown constant of proportionality, and are left with the desired U value.

    I can see that various internal temperatures tell you something, and the T2 measurement is going to be close to the glass temperature. However...
    The beauty of using the glass temp itself, is that whatever unknown & test-dependant circulating air currents occur inside the room, they won't affect the result of the calculation. Once the glass reaches a certain temperature, that's all you need to know to find the power loss.

    The trouble with air currents is that they are so unpredictable. Take double glazing - it's more efficient at 20mm than 100mm. Apparently its something to do with more circulating currents, but who'd have predicted that ?
    So that's my suggestion - remove the influence of the different internal air currents caused by the blind being up or down.

    Rob
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeFeb 6th 2011 edited
     
    Posted By: RobLSo that's my suggestion - remove the influence of the different internal air currents caused by the blind being up or down.


    Throw in a Reynolds number to make it look real, if nothing else scientists will nod knowingly :wink:

    Just done a quick calc on my frame and come out with a U-Value of 0.87. Looked up the value on the interweb and they said for softwood 0.94, so about right. Mind you it is late and my arithmetise is dreadful sometimes, so may just be a lucky coincidence.
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 7th 2011
     
    flip....... thanks again!

    ...but the glass temperature is probably a bit lower than 16C as you get very close..... and considerably lower when the blind is down.

    I've looked at SAP 2005 & it reckons a single glazed window including the frame should be 4.8 not 5.8, so should I use that?

    It gives me a better value at 1.7 - 1.8! :devil:

    Table 6e also gives a value for 6mm gap DG (air-filled) at 3.1 & 2.8 for 12mm gap - this means I've surpassed my target! :whoop:
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 7th 2011
     
    Yes, the glass on the inside of the room will be quite a bit cooler than the nearby air. Glass is very conductive, about 0.96W/mK, so a 4mm thick bit has a U value of 0.96/0.004 = 240W/m^2K This is clearly a silly real life number, you never see a U as high as that - as we always give glass & walls & finished building parts U numbers as in_situ numbers, ie. including the effects of the air around them. So the SG glass in_situ U is dominated by the air. Still air U is about 8, outside moving air is assumed higher at 24 or so, giving the overall in-situ-glass U as:
    U = 1/ ( 1/8 + 1/240 + 1/24) = 5.8
    Confession: I don't have a proper ref for the 8, I just saw that on this forum somewhere, and the 24 I had to back-calculate. :-(

    Should you use U = 4.8 or 5.8 as your basis? Hmm.. The 5.8 fig is from Pilkington Spectrum software (which is free & brilliant !), and will be glass only. Single glaze glass might as well be a sheet of copper, for all the insulation it affords, almost anything will be better. It's no wonder that glass in a frame is a lower U than just glass alone.
    Having thought for a while, yes, I think that if the average U of your window is 4.8, then that is what you should use. The experiment just finds what factor by which the power loss is reduced, hence the average U is improved.
    You just need to say the test window overall U value fell from 4.8 to 1.8.

    I'd still like to see more accurate temp sensors, placed in exactly the right place. Sorry to badger :-)

    link
    http://spectrum.pilkington.com/offline.aspx
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 7th 2011
     
    I just had a play with that Pilk software, trying to replicate your setup just for fun.

    Glass, 20mm air, Glass has a U of 2.8
    Glass, 30mm air, Glass has a U of 2.8
    Glass, 50mm air, Glass has a U of 2.8
    Glass, 60mm air, Glass has a U of 2.8
    Glass, 100mm air, Glass has a U of 2.9

    I'm deliberetely not using low e glass, I know your blinds have mylar, but its buried inside, so "hidden" from the air gap and just makes a higher U material. See how I avoid the word multifoil. :devil:

    Going a bit out on a limb, but I reckon your setup is like the above glass-air-glass, then with extra insulation.
    So the insulation of the blind alone is U= 1/( 1/1.8-1/2.8) = 5.04
    Thats the same as 5mm of celotex.

    Just a bit of fun that, don't take much store in it, the numbers I'm sure are getting lost in the error bars.

    All the best !
    oo found the smileys :bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorecohome
    • CommentTimeFeb 9th 2011 edited
     
    Thanks again Rob, I'm hoping the NPL hotbox test will happen soon and I'm sure they will use better thermometers than £1.90 Amazon buys!

    I've got a lot on my plate at the mo with Retrofit for the Future orders & getting a sample & frame ready for Ecobuild & sorting out a new website before then...... but I'll try & do some more testing after that glut. EG. what happens if I leave out the Mylar layers, can I refine the edge detail, etc, etc. Oh & if you think its better than the other 21 'innovations' then do feel free to vote for me! (I've got no chance of winning, look at some of the competition....) https://ktn.innovateuk.org/web/innovation-showcase-group/ifz-at-ecobuild-2011

    If you drop by, do tell me who you are
    :bigsmile:

    Katy
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