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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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.

Buy individually or both books together. Delivery is free!


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    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeMar 20th 2012
     
    Nope, not even ordered one yet, but refactoring like a good 'un to be ready.

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeMar 20th 2012
     
    Ah right. I'm in the queue at RS. Looking forward to see what it will do.
  1.  
    I'm at 2.77kWh/HDD with a HDD based on 18C. This is pretty good, I think, considering the average winter is around 3500-4000HDDs. Especially as I don't really have much insulation and the house is 180m2 (plus 90m2 heated basement). It's all in the airtightness. Daily baseload is taken to be 9.8kWh - based on actual measurements. This winter's figures are about 6% less than last year - savings I attribute to further improvement in airtigtness due to replacing the old warped front doors and a couple of ancient skylights.

    Internal temperature was 72F (22.2C) for most of the winter with the heating set to run as required to maintain this temperature 24/7

    Paul in Montreal.
  2.  
    OK I went to degreedays.net (thanks Ed!), searched for Aberdeen, an option came up to search by map around Aberdeen. Surprisingly there are HDD sets from lots of local weather stations available, not just the met office ones and airports but also council buildings, amateur met stations etc etc

    I downloaded the HDD data for every station within about 20 miles of me. The difference between the highest and lowest was 18%. Surprisingly the station nearest the sea was not the lowest HDD. Two stations a mile apart were different by 6%.

    From this I agree with Seret that the available HDD data is not very precise and I shouldnt sweat over making corrections for my own site location.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeMar 22nd 2012
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenThe difference between the highest and lowest was 18%. Surprisingly the station nearest the sea was not the lowest HDD.
    Was the trend the same i.e was is consistently different 18%.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeMar 22nd 2012
     
    I think local variation of 20% is pretty good on the Celsius scale as it assumes that 0°C is in median value (possibly) and the resolution is 0.1°C (probably) and the precision is about 1% (across the temperature range). The accuracy is probably about 5%. Then there is rounding errors.
    The way to get around this is to calculate the Standard Error of the Mean SD/N^0.5, this will allow you to set the upper and lower bounds, and as long as 95% of your data is within these, you have nothing to worry about.
    Alternatively you you can go down the ensemble route where you average all the results from the different sources during the same time period. I would use mode rather than mean if there are enough data points as that automatically gets rid of the extreme reading (these are the ones that are most likely to be wrong). Think of this as a consensus method of looking at data. Look at what they have in common, not what they have that is different.
    Statistics is your friend here and your data will not lie to you.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeMar 22nd 2012
     
    Posted By: SteamyTeaStatistics is your friend here and your data will not lie to you.
    I will resist.....
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeMar 22nd 2012
     
    Good man :bigsmile:
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