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. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: tonyIt definitely helps stabilise internal temperatures makes it more comfortableI think it should, but have only seen poor research methodology into it (similar to what I did). There seems to be at best a very small stabilisation effect.
Posted By: finnydoes it not depend on how good the airflow/change management in the building is?Possibly, but if they are using different regimes then it is not the same building. Ventilation often features in the literature, to me it is another variable that is not properly accounted for.
Posted By: bot de pailleor are you talking about just in your home?Not so much my house, but UK in general. I have data for my house though, rather hoping others have data for theirs so can compare. There is a lot of research from the USA, have read some of it, but does seem to be a lot about keeping places cool.
Posted By: daserraSurely you get the average temperature, over a period related to the amount of massI think it is much more complicated than that, why I put up charts showing temperatures, solar gain and windspeeds.
Posted By: dicksterAveraging 18-21C throughout the year with me in charge of stove, windows (and wife).Even (especially) if you think you're in control of your wife the opposite is probably true.
Posted By: PeterStarckMy experience of high thermal mass houses is that they are fine for those buildings that need a large heat source to maintain a given temperature but that very low energy houses such as PH have problems with comfort because getting the house up to temperature is difficult unless you can pump a lot of heat into it quickly.The only reason you would need to pump heat into the thermal mass quickly is if you'd let it cool, e.g. while on a winter holiday, & wanted to get it back up to temperature quickly. If you're willing to wait a day or two on the rare occasions you go on holiday during winter then this isn't a major issue.
Posted By: PeterStarckI visited a PH which had high density concrete block walls on the ground floor and timber frame walls on the first floor. The owners complained that it was cold downstairs and warm upstairs.This is common in all houses. Heat rises so you tend to get a natural temperature gradient from the ground floor's sub-floor to the first floor's ceiling. Thermal mass will not change this.
Posted By: PeterStarckHeat rises so you tend to get a natural temperature gradient from the ground floor's sub-floor to the first floor's ceilingNot in my house, always colder upstairs than down in the winter, but that may be for other reasons (no heating upstairs and more air movement).