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: Kenny_MI am interested in trying to work out the U values for the house based on actual measurements. In the attachment at this link from the states that I found on the web there is a table for this, does anyone know of an equivalent for the UK in C and with U values rather than R, or can point me towards the calculation to work this out.
There are some oddities even in regard to the modern extension that make estimating the U values tricky, for example the main side wall is of unknown thickness, or whether there is a cavity, and is butted up against a historic stone garden wall on one side which must also affect the overall U value.
Posted By: Kenny_MI know that replacing double glazing is not usually the most cost effective thing to do, but this seems to be where most of the heat is leaving the house
Posted By: Kenny_MI did this a while back using he F deg scale on the IR gun, but I knew that there was something about different units. From what I remember the walls were in on the lower end of the table but I figured at the time that it would only be an estimate anyway, and was just reinforcing the fact that there was no insulation in the wall.
I could probably do what you suggest by just opening up where the satellite cable comes in, rather than drilling another hole.
Posted By: Kenny_MThis presumably means that the temperature of the walls will have reached an equilibrium, while here where we tend to time the heating on and off so perhaps I would need to leave the heating on constant for at least 24 hours to get a more realistic value.
Posted By: Kenny_MI think I am at the point that I need to start to think about glazing and insulation.
I like the idea of heat pumps, solar etc, but I think I need to be realistic about heating a large old house like this I think that probably means sticking with GCH but going for a modern condensing boiler.
one of the biggest problems I have found is finding contractors who are actually 'experts'!
its worrying me that I seem to know more about the issues involved that some of the people who are doing it for a living!!
Posted By: Kenny_MThis is one of the most common memes in high performance building.However, one of the biggest problems I have found is finding contractors who are actually 'experts'!!! I had a guy out from a local company the other week and he showed me the insulation they would use externally, but when I asked him what it was made of he couldn't tell me, other than say "it meets all the regs". He was talking about putting the same stuff on the sandstone walls but couldn't tell me if it was breathable. I'm far from an expert in this area, but its worrying me that I seem to know more about the issues involved that some of the people who are doing it for a living!!
Posted By: Kenny_MAs this means that it would probably have to be cavity filled from inside, which would presumably mean pulling off the internal plasterboard
Posted By: Kenny_MThe other thing that concerns me is where the draughts are getting into the cavity and I need to figure that out. If its from the roof space then any tied to the roof deck might be a bit redundant. I can't see any vents on the wall so barring the roof I can't see how else it is getting in in such volume.
Posted By: Kenny_MThe other thing that concerns me is where the draughts are getting into the cavity and I need to figure that out.
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