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: cjardTurns out, the evening and night time purge modes would perhaps be better named as "time limit purge" and "continuous purge" as they can happen at any time.
Posted By: djhOr is it the case that you can choose whether or not evening purge and/or night-time purge are active?Yes, I think you choose exactly one of the four modes CJard lists: off/normal/evening/night.
But in which case, I would want to be able to stop an evening purge when I went to bed.http://www.dealec.co.uk/acatalog/pdf/ventaxia/vent-axia-sentinel-kinetic-selector.pdf says:
In Evening and Night Time Purge modes, the user can turn off the boost function by pressing the Boost button.That reference also says:
Evening Purge mode: The fans run on Boost speed until the internal temperature falls below the set 'Indoor' temperature. If, after five hours the internal temperature is still above the set 'Indoor' temperature, the unit will switch down to normal speed for the remainder of the 'bypass open' period.That answers the question about when it'll next do a boost: after it's dropped out of the bypass temperature conditions for a while. It also sort-of implies that the bypass remains active at the end of the 5 hours, it's just the boost that turns off.
Posted By: Ed DaviesThat looks like a very useful post, thanks. I'm glad you added the last paragraph as I was just about to ask that. Odd though that summer bypass closes at the end of the evening-purge 5 hours even if the temperature conditions continue to apply; why not just turn off the boost?
Posted By: djhIt's also interesting that there seems to be no hysteresis on the temperature setting.
I don't understand why evening purge would ever come on, since night-time purge comes on at the same time and stays on longer?
Or is it the case that you can choose whether or not evening purge and/or night-time purge are active? But in which case, I would want to be able to stop an evening purge when I went to bed.
Posted By: Simon StillOk. So, for clarity - there's no way of controlling when these happen? Our boost is quite audible so having this run in the evening before we go to bed would be useful but having it run all night wouldn't.,
Also, boost is obviously using more power. In theory the 'nighttime' could result in the unit running on boost for days at a time in summer - even if the house was unoccupied.Posted By: AMGhumidity sensor in the unit only triggers boost if the average of the whole house is is above the set humidity point
that's all it can do as it is taking air after the manifold. I thought it did some magic based on rate of rise so that it could detect something like a shower. I have humidistats in the bathrooms but before they were wired up the unit did seem to switch into boost mode based on the internal stat.
Posted By: cjardPosted By: djhIt's also interesting that there seems to be no hysteresis on the temperature setting.
Probably not required; the rate of change of the house will likely be quite slow (it's not an effective cooling mechanism) and there's another mechanism that prevents a purge starting right after one has finished
Posted By: cjardAs a separate note, I've never felt like it was a great idea to boost ventilate an entire house just because of one brief shower; I'm sure that the 24h effect of normal ventilation would adequately deal with any built up moisture, even if it's buffered in the walls. I don't plan to stress too much about boosting one bathroom..
What we really need though is intelligent valves on every duct, that call for airflow from the unit, much like thermostats call for heat and control UFH zone valves; forget faffing with a manometer, just set each butterfly valve/mass airflow/humidi meter based intelli-controller at the manifold end with what airflow the design sheet says it should have and then forget it. Then you could have your shower, and the exhaust valve (and its paired supply) could open up more to boost that one room..
Or maybe that's like fuel injection in a world where a carburettor does just fine and doesn't warrant anything more
Posted By: cjardI get the feeling that no one in business is doing it because it just won't deliver a leaps and bounds difference over standard performance to make he cost and complexity increase viableProbably yes, but only if you're looking at the MHRV in isolation.
Posted By: Ed Daviesfrom 12% to 18%
Dry the house out in the summer to leave potential for absorbing water in the winter to release heat.
Posted By: djhThat's a huge jump, very unlikely IMHONeil May's Breathability In Buildings document [¹] gives equilibrium moisture contents for wood at different RH's and temperatures. 21 °C, RH 30% 6.2%; RH 70% 13.1%. So my numbers look a bit high but the right general sort of range, much more than 1% change though 6%, I accept, is probably a bit ambitious.
Posted By: djhIt doesn't work like that in our house.That's probably because you're not running your MHRV specifically with the intention of keeping the RH low in late summer/early autumn.
Posted By: djhPerhaps you could achieve something using an active system that heated the cat litter in summer to dry it out?Yes, that's what I was wondering about - using my solar warm air panels on the gable ends for that when they're not needed for space heating.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenSpeaking Thermodynamics - the latent heat of adsorption is not the same as latent heat of condensation.Good point. Because it's in a lower energy state when adsorbed it'll presumably be a bit higher, which is good (at least until you want to dry it out again).
Posted By: Ed DaviesNeil May's Breathability In Buildings document [¹] gives equilibrium moisture contents for wood at different RH's and temperatures. 21 °C, RH 30% 6.2%; RH 70% 13.1%.
That's probably because you're not running your MHRV specifically with the intention of keeping the RH low in late summer/early autumn.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenYou might like this: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876610215014605
Posted By: Ed Davies
I'm seriously thinking about large boxes of cat litter in the loft to increase this capacity. Dry the house out in the summer to leave potential for absorbing water in the winter to release heat.
Posted By: Ed DaviesBut it's all mostly about buffering humidity. Any long-term heat gain is a tiny, by-the-way, bonus.
Posted By: cjardI'm not certain if it's the weather, or whether my recent activation of the mvhr is a/the factor, but the RH in my house in winter time was 50-60, now it's 35-45.. I've reduced the fan speed of the mvhr (from 30% to 20%) to see if this makes a difference. I don't really want it to keep dropping.. I'll be boiling the kettle with the lid off!