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: WillInAberdeen
Simon, out of interest, the power used by the fan should be roughly proportional to the cube of the flowrate. This is because the velocity is proportional to the flowrate, the energy per litre of air is proportional to velocity², and the number of litres is proportional to flowrate.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_laws" rel="nofollow" >https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_laws
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Posted By: cjardOdd. I wouldn't attribute that to summer bypass per se. Perhaps you effectively cooled the house at night and your good insulation is introducing temperature increment delay. Summer bypass can't make incoming air cooler than it is when it's floating around outside the houseAs Artiglio says, the MVHR does help. And it sounds like you agree with us.
Summer bypass surely only helps cool a home that's warmer than the outside world. If you've done a good job of cooling the house down at night, then the heat exchanger in the MVHR will actively extract the heat from the warm supply air and transfer it into the cool exhaust air
In other word, the MHVR unit tries to preserve the state of the house relative to the world. If the house is warmer, the HX tries to keep it that way. If the house is cooler, the HX tries to keep it that way
Posted By: mikrtWith MVHR running uses 346 W, without uses 302W, So it consumes 44W/0.044kW. My average cost is 27p/kWh from next week (I'm on Octopus GO)What you are failing to take into account, is the heat recovered (Ventilation & Heat Recovery).
Posted By: wookeyOurs uses 13W on normal speed and we typically run it 10 hours/day (8am to 6pm) in winter. We turn it off for 6 months in the summer and use windows instead.As a matter of interest, do you measure CO2 levels? When I started doing so I was rather shocked how high they were, so upped the ventilation rate.
Posted By: borpinToday my Komfovent unit consumed 0.88kWh but recovered 7.93 kWh. Money well spent!That's probably true, but only if I interpret 'day' as meaning 'time since midnight until now'
Until later this afternoon, outside temperature was 14°C. On days like this I tend to maintain as much heat inside as possible, so it is hotter than minimum.It's amazing how differently different houses in different places perform. Our bypass opened on 10 June and hasn't closed yet - I don't expect it to for another month or two - apart from when it's hotter outside when it switches the heat exchanger back in circuit. It's 25°C inside, which my wife noticed was identical to the temperature last year when the weather was so different. We've got some windows open today as well.
Posted By: djhThat's probably true, but only if I interpret 'day' as meaning 'time since midnight until now' i.e. 51 x 24 /1000 = 1.224 not 0.88If you do that, you need to do a similar figure for the heat recovered!
Posted By: djhIt's amazing how differently different houses in different places perform. Our bypass opened on 10 June and hasn't closed yetI also think it is the different units and different technologies.
As a matter of interest, do you measure CO2 levels?
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