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: Nick ParsonsSo your space-heating requirement is 4.2kW?As I read it, that's to the radiators. There's also the UFH.
Posted By: Chris P Baconvery short service life on the Scottish islands do to the effects of the salt air.I went around taking pictures of old ASHP that were within a few tens of meters of the sea down here.
Posted By: Chris P BaconI seem to remember someone on here mentioning that the outdoor units of ASHPs have a very short service life on the Scottish islands do to the effects of the salt air.
Posted By: SteamyTeaI don't think that there is any real problem for the space heating. That is not related to the 'amount' needed, that is just a case of sizing the ASHP correctly. Not as if you need the UFH to be higher than 35°C. You can look at your heat pump CoP/Temperature curve and local temp and RH data to see what is needed.
It is the hot water that is the real problem, here you do need a high temperature. Disregarding the legionella problem, you really need hot water at about 50°C. An ASHP can deliver at that temperature, but the longer it is running, the more likely it is to frost up. This is often worse around 0°C ambient temperature as the RH can be close to 100%.
Posted By: GarethCair source heat pumps in principle perform worse for heating new, well insulated buildings, since such buildings only need to be heated when the outdoor temp is colder, which is when ASHP's COPs drop off.
Posted By: newnightDo you really think they perform better in old drafty buildings?It would be reasonable to expect that a heat pump which is running for more of the year, (e.g., one for an old drafty building) would have a higher COP averaged over the year than one that only runs during a few coldest months. In that rather limited sense they would perform better.
Posted By: Ed DaviesPosted By: newnightDo you really think they perform better in old drafty buildings?It would be reasonable to expect that a heat pump which is running for more of the year, (e.g., one for an old drafty building) would have a higher COP averaged over the year than one that only runs during a few coldest months. In that rather limited sense they would perform better.
Posted By: SteamyTeaHave I ever mentioned that space heating and DHW do different things at different times and at different temperatures.
Expecting the two from one ASHP is the wrong way of thinking about it. They are not gas, oil or resistance heater, don't expect them to work in the same way.
You are not going to get DHW at 50°C and the maximum CoP, physics does not work like that. This is not a 'fault' with heat pumps, just a limit that has to be considered.
There is an economic theory called 'Division of Labour', this applies to heating systems just as well as production of wine and rugs. It basically states that it is often cheaper to occasionally buy in a product that is more expensive than you can make it for, than loose the sales. It is about reliability and overall cost.
Posted By: SteamyTeaExpecting the two from one ASHP is the wrong way of thinking about it. They are not gas, oil or resistance heater, don't expect them to work in the same way.
You are not going to get DHW at 50°C and the maximum CoP, physics does not work like that. This is not a 'fault' with heat pumps, just a limit that has to be considered.
Posted By: newnightCan anyone advise, if I go for 2 outdoor units, are they better as one connected system or should I run 2 separate systems 1 for heating and 1 for hot water
Posted By: SteamyTeaIf the maximum heat loss is 12.5 kW, then a 16 kW ASHP will do you.
Posted By: djhPosted By: SteamyTeaIf the maximum heat loss is 12.5 kW, then a 16 kW ASHP will do you.
He wants DHW as well ...
Posted By: ringiThen you need to consider how long you are willing to wait for the house to warm up when it is very cold outside and the heating has been off for some time.
The average kW over the complete day that is needed for hot water is not that high
Posted By: djhBut more often than not there are reasons to not want to average it over the whole day.Yes. But space heating can be averaged over longer periods, particularly if you have a UHF slab, so if there's a simple way to divert all/most of the heat pump output to DHW when recovery (reheating the tank) is wanted then that should be fine. Running the ASHP at DHW temperatures for only a short period will help with the long-term average CoP.
Posted By: djh
I think this oft-cited concern is overstated. If the house iw well-insulated then warming it up from cold is a pretty rare event so efficiency doesn't matter and it's cheap and easy to plug in a few electric heaters to increase the power output at times like that.
It depends how the “head demand” was worked out in the first place.
We live in the North West, if the heat demand is worked out assuming it is -1 outside, and there is a long cold patch like a few years ago when it is -5 outside AND you are trying to heat a house from cold…..
The ASHP may already be taking a lot of the incoming power to the building, so you can’t run many electric heaters. The ASHP would also be giving less than its rated output due to it being -5 outside.
I think what I am trying to say is that you need a safety margin somewhere and the “heat from cold” is often what the safety margin is called.
Posted By: ringiIt depends how the “head demand” was worked out in the first place.
We live in the North West, if the heat demand is worked out assuming it is -1 outside, and there is a long cold patch like a few years ago when it is -5 outside AND you are trying to heat a house from cold…..
The ASHP may already be taking a lot of the incoming power to the building, so you can’t run many electric heaters. The ASHP would also be giving less than its rated output due to it being -5 outside.