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. |
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Posted By: LittleRadRidingHoodHello lovely people!
...wiring a few of those seems so much easier and less costly than ripping through lots of walls and ceilings to fit all the ducts for a centralised system, all of which then need additional work to cover them up.
Posted By: LittleRadRidingHooda single-room one in the kitchen and paired units in the bathroom and toilet, which are on opposite sides of the top floorIf you choose decentralised units, you want them on the same wall of the house. If they're on opposite walls you've created a wind-tunnel.
Posted By: tonyCentral system will solve problems , but will increase your energy use ( it can be very efficient but will use energy)MVHR systems save energy. That's their whole point! The minimal energy consumed by their fans is a lot less than the heating energy consumed heating ventilation air obtained in other ways.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenA decentralised MHRV uses about 3x less energy to overcome duct friction than a centralised MHRV does, so saves energy, *only if* both options have similar heat exchanger % efficiency and similar motor efficiency.That's interesting to know, thanks. FWIW, the PH-certified distributed units are all a bit worse efficiency and a bit worse SFP than the whole-house units. Which is probably as expected. I just measured the power consumption of my unit. At 50 m³/hr it is 11 W and at 125 m³/hr it's around 41 W. That's gone up from my measurements when the system was new, which were 9 and 29 W/m³ respectively. So I suppose either the ducts or the fans, or the plenums/manifolds have got a bit of dust in now. I typically run the system at 50 most of the time and 125 for a few hours a day. So maybe half a kWh per day, or perhaps about the same as lighting? There's definitely a danger of worrying too much about the consumption of an MVHR system.
Posted By: LittleRadRidingHoodThank you all for the helpful advice!
half a kWh per day, or perhaps about the same as lighting? There's definitely a danger of worrying too much about the consumption of an MVHR system.So about 1kWh/m²a, and duct friction is actually helpful towards the 15kWh/m²a budget, for part of the year. Agree that the actual air heat losses from unnecessary ventilation are more interesting than the electricity, if the SFP is good.
wind tunnelI've not seen any issues with wind tunnel effects. The theory sounds plausible*, but in practice the air speed squirting out of the vent terminals is fast enough to overcome the wind pressure that we get in housing areas, and the vent terminals are angled down to deflect the wind. Our vents are on one side of our house and opening a window on the other side doesn't upset them.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenI've not seen any issues with wind tunnel effects. The theory sounds plausible*, but in practice the air speed squirting out of the vent terminals is fast enough to overcome the wind pressure that we get in housing areas, and the vent terminals are angled down to deflect the wind. Our vents are on one side of our house and opening a window on the other side doesn't upset them.It's good to know you haven't seen any problems. Air speeds out of ducts (and within them) is limited to minimise noise and excess power consumption. PH good practice is 2 m/s or so. That's a light breeze (i.e. less than a gentle breeze) in weather terms, so outdoor windspeeds will mostly exceed the duct speeds. On better MVHR units the fans tend to be volume controlled, so outdoor windspeed doesn't much affect indoor duct speeds, but it does affect the power consumption. I suspect the windspeed doesn't impact directly; I suspect it's the stagnation pressure at the outdoor terminals that matters. So I think in this regard, the additional duct resistance may be an advantage.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenThe stagnation pressure rise is a misconception (overestimate) about wind and houses, because the wind doesn't stagnate (stop) - it blows over and around.I think that's wrong on both counts. The wind does stop (or nearly so) in the case where it blows directly against a wall of the building, near the centre of that wall (CBD 34 is a reference). Also the stagnation pressure is LESS than the suction pressure over the roof in many cases (by a factor of two or so) and is therefore not an overestimate.
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