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.
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Posted By: wookeyYes I am pondering whether to move some/all of the lighting wiring inside, as opposed to having two penetrations per room as is it at the moment (switch drop + lamp).You can avoid the switch drops by using kinetic switches (i.e. no wiring, no batteries). They seem to work OK in my experience. But obviously you still need power to the lamp itself and to the switch receiver.
Ones in a service cavity rather less so. Some kind of neat hatch-fitting is one possibilityBlanking faceplate over a maybe double socket backbox?
Posted By: wookeyThat would work, but I like a nice simple mains switch that costs a couple of quid over the fancy kinetic switches at £30 per switch+receiver pair.I can see that but when you consider the cost of materials and time to install the drops etc, I suppose it works out a lot closer. I think they were somewhat cheaper when I bought mine and I've used them in places where I want more than one switch per light/receiver. But horses for courses, sure.
Posted By: wookeyHow do people do the ceiling/lighting wiring in normal passivehouses, with a nice membrane over the whole ceiling?Not sure. We simply didn't put any lights or sockets in the airtight layer. Downstairs the ceilings are fair game; upstairs all the lights are on walls or on the top of dwarf internal walls (the tops of two built-in wardrobes). Maybe the airtight layer is at roof level so you don't care about the first floor ceiling in a conventional design? Or use deeper battens? Or Instaabox or similar airtightness 'gloves'. I guess other people run the cables in the joist space, along the centre of the joist and seal them where they penetrate the airtight layer.
Posted By: tonySmall hole through membrane, sealed from above before insulation and below after terminating wires with acrylic sealantNot in a passivhaus, no way. Either a grommet (e.g Pro clima or Dafa) or my favourite, short lengths of stretchy airtight tape (Siga Rissan is my favourite) which can be used for cables, pipes and ducts: any size penetration.
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