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. |
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Posted By: Mike1To couple an ASHP with space heating, a small buffer tank is often used so that the heat pump doesn't keep turning on an off with small fluctuations in temperature. It would be possible to add a PV-connected immersion heater to heat the buffer, if you're generating lots surplus electricity.
Posted By: Mike1ASHPs are normally only used for space heating, as they operate most efficiently at lower temperatures - which is why they're good for underfloor heating.
Posted By: Mike1A thermal store would often be used for hot water, and in your case heated by PV electricity when available, or from the grid when not. If you have plenty of sunshine you could go big enough for a couple of days supply, but it will start to get expensive for more than that.
Posted By: Mike1Having said that, youcouldrun everything off a thermal store, heated by the ASHP + PV. Or use the ASHP to pre-heat the hot water in the thermal store. It depends how complex you want to make it / how the financial payback works out.
Posted By: Mike1BTW, note that really effective airtightness can significantly reduce the space heating requirement - but that involves much more than just draft exclusion at doors and windows - it involves sealing the entire structure.
Posted By: goodevansUsing the ASHP It costs me the equivalent of less than 5p per KWh to heat the water in summer (7p in winter) - I have to put up with some fan noise for 45 minutes a day - but that is all.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenIf your tank were/is a standard one, the standing losses would account for a good chunk (>1kWh) of your daily usage. It could be argued that you could have installed a smaller tank, as if you are not using solar or overnight E7/E10 there's no need to store a whole day's worth of hot water. You'd use up the smaller tank and then reheat it several times during a day, eg after each person showers - so perform the same cycle you currently use, but more often. Smaller tank= less standing loss and cheaper to build and quicker to reheat.
Posted By: GreenPaddyPiH, it would be good to see the figures that show it is generally accepted that you should not combine DHW and heating in a TS. I think the range of possible scenarios for energy inputs and outputs make that statement too general. Probably true if you have a big old energy guzzling building. Not true if you have a well insulated set up.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenThe distinction between a DHW cylinder vs a thermal store is a bit artificial
conceptually they both store heated water.so
You choose one that suits your needs for storing heat. (Or both, or neither).
Posted By: Mike1Thermal stores and unvented hot water cylinders don't store hot water under pressure
Posted By: WillInAberdeenIn discussion, he thought they'd be of more interest to a plumber, whereas he considered himself to be a 'heating engineer' so he doesn't concern himself with inspecting those bits.
Posted By: djhI wonder if there are standards that are supposed to be followed for describing and executing such services?