Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
![]() |
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: sydthebeatmaybe the 'per year' aspect of the unit is important??
Posted By: James Nortonthe American R value to european U value issue....
Posted By: djhIf you really want to scare yourself, look at how the Yanks calculate heat pump COPs.I'm not sure what's so scary here as the method used is simply COP = Power Out / Power In
Posted By: Jeremy SNo, no, no, no, NO!
Posted By: tom.harriganNow, using Ed's method calculate the cost per day for a 17W bulb on for 9.75hrs a day..
Posted By: Paul in MontrealPosted By: djhIf you really want to scare yourself, look at how the Yanks calculate heat pump COPs.I'm not sure what's so scary here as the method used is simply COP = Power Out / Power In
Posted By: djh
Well, the question is about units. In most places COP is a dimensionless ratio but in some American documents I've seen COP expressed in "BTU/kWh", which gives bigger numbers than the European/Japanese/etc way of doing it and so presumably makes American heat pumps "better" than European or Asian ones when trailertrash/chavs come to buy." alt="
" src="http:///newforum/extensions/Vanillacons/smilies/standard/devil.gif" >
EER: The Energy Efficiency Ratio is calculated by dividing the amount of cooling put out by an air conditioning system IN BTUH, divided by the amount of energy put in to it IN KW. If the air conditioning capacity of a heat pump is 48,000 BTUH, and the compressor, fan and pumps consume 3.43 kW (3,430 watts), the EER is:
48,000 / 3,430 = 14.0
To convert this to COPc (COP cooling), divide the EER by 3.412. The COPc is:
14.0 / 3.412 = 4.1
Posted By: tom.harrigan... perhaps you would deign to enlighten me as to precisely how many kWh Ed Davis gets through each year? I may be bottom of the class, but I'm keen to learn!
I admit that I was a bit sloppy in that I should have made my units completely explicit. Nevertheless I would have expected a "scientist" (or anyone else with an interest for that matter) to understand that:
kW * hrs * days = kW * (hrs/day) * (days/year) = kWh/year
What sort of "science" do you do exactly?
Posted By: SimonHIf the real unit of energy is a joule why not sell and refer to everything in joules?
1 to 28 of 28