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      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 1st 2023 edited
     
    So, Every now and again I look at replacing my direct electric heating with one or more heat pumps. This time I've got slightly different answers that I don't fully understand and could use some help with.

    I presently heat my house with an electrical post-heater in the MVHR duct (nominal 1.8 kW), plus a radiant heater by the front door (also 1.8 kW). Both are operated only at night as required, unless there are truly exceptional conditions. Hot water is provided from a thermal store that is heated by PV when available and backed up by a 3 kW mains immersion, again operated for a few hours overnight, when necessary.

    I've looked at A2A heat pumps as being simplest and cheapest. I don't have any wet heating circuits. I thought about putting in just one indoor unit in the living room. But now I'm thinking that the MVHR post heater works by heating the air to 45°C and circulating it. I wonder if a single heat pump emitter can do that job? The front door heater is on the north side of the house and in an open lobby so it manages to heat up the colder part of the house a bit extra when necessary. How would I determine what I need?

    I've also become aware of heat pump water heaters recently, so I've considered getting one. But the ones I've looked at seem to have the heat pump packed along with the tank and so have massive great air ducts to/from the tank. I don't fancy cutting big holes in my walls. The ones I've seen are also cylinders rather than thermal stores, so need annual inspections and more maintenance. Are there any products that provide the benefits without the costs and hassle?

    I also happened to look at the boiler upgrade scheme - https://www.gov.uk/apply-boiler-upgrade-scheme - and was surprised to see that the eligibility conditions appear to include me. It says "replacing fossil fuel heating systems (such as oil, gas or electric)". Well my system is electric, so am I eligible? Does anybody know, before I "speak to an MCS certified installer"?
  1.  
    What would you aim to achieve, given your current setup and consumption?

    Reduced lifecycle costs? (unlikely)
    Reduced lifecycle carbon? (fairly unlikely)

    You likely already found that 45⁰C is a bit too hot for an a-a, and your daily heat requirements are too low for most a-w (~10kWh daily?) (Edit: do you monitor/log how much heating you use?)

    You could fit a very small a-a, heating the MHRV duct to 25-30⁰, so a power of a few hundred W, run it for more hours each day to get enough kWh out in total?

    Could you heat the duct using water from the TS? Also pump the TS water through the wall to/from a location suitable for an a-w and heat exchanger, if you can find one small enough?

    Wouldn't bother with MCS, they have to follow a particular accredited process, which will be overkill for your house.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 1st 2023 edited
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenWhat would you aim to achieve, given your current setup and consumption?
    Good question. That's one reason why I haven't done anything yet. Assuage a vague feeling of guilt?

    Reduced lifecycle costs? (unlikely)
    Reduced lifecycle carbon? (fairly unlikely)
    As you say, they seem unlikely.

    You likely already found that 45⁰C is a bit too hot for an a-a, and your daily heat requirements are too low for most a-w (~10kWh daily?)
    Yes to both, although I don't see any reason in principle why an A2A shouldn't heat to the same temperature as an A2W. Heat pumps are becoming more common in cars nowadays, so there's another wilde idea.

    You could fit a very small a-a, heating the MHRV duct to 25-30⁰, so a power of a few hundred W, run it for more hours each day to get enough kWh out in total?
    I'm still not clear how I would heat the duct. It would seem to involve a bunch of custom metalwork to adapt a rectangular heat pump emitter to my circular duct. And extra space in the plant room, which may or may not be a problem. At the moment I'm on an E7 tariff and switching to an equivalent all-day tariff would cause a significant increase in price.

    Could you heat the duct using water from the TS? Also pump the TS water through the wall to/from a location suitable for an a-w and heat exchanger, if you can find one small enough?
    The TS is near an external wall, so putting small pipes (gas or water) through the wall could be a necessary evil. But the TS is the opposite end of the house from the plant room with the MVHR, so that would be awkward.

    Wouldn't bother with MCS, they have to follow a particular accredited process, which will be overkill for your house.
    Yeah; I'll probably try one and get frustrated and then try to find a good one who isn't MCS, which I suspect is more difficult. But I might learn something from the MCS one.
    • CommentAuthorneelpeel
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: djh At the moment I'm on an E7 tariff and switching to an equivalent all-day tariff would cause a significant increase in price.


    Possibly not. I'm on E7 (charge EV overnight) but looking to switch to the Octopus Tracker tariff. Worth doing the sums...

    https://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/beat-the-energy-price-cap-with-a-tracker-tariff-at-octopus-energy-4078767
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: neelpeelPossibly not. I'm on E7 (charge EV overnight) but looking to switch to the Octopus Tracker tariff. Worth doing the sums...
    That requires a smart meter, which I presently have religious objection to. (no local access to my own consumption data, despite a legal obligation to provide it AIUI).

    But if I overcame my objections, is there a site somewhere, or a program to download, where I could put in my consumption history and see what it would have cost on the Tracker tariff? (and yes it would be an approximation since I could have moved consumption around a bit but you have to start somewhere). Looking at the graph in your link, it looks like it would have been more expensive during December for example. And everytime is more expensive than the night rate apart from a short time on 29 Dec.
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: djhHeat pumps are becoming more common in cars nowadays, so there's another wilde idea.


    Most Electric car would likely have a suitable heatpump - a low power A2A effectively. IC engined cars tend to have a heatpump where the compressor is driven directly by the engine with a dodgy "rotating seal", hence the need for recharging, and are not appropriate. Heatpumps usually use F-gasses though, so you aren't allowed to mess with them without an F-gas cert as releasing the magic gasses causes yet more global warming.

    Simplest & cheapest heatpump solution would be an air conditioner, I'm sure you could run a 3kW one in the small hours as your present use patterns with a direct electric heater. A lot of them come with sophisticated controls and are very quiet. However the heatpump+tank solution gives DHW too!
    I think best choice depends on how much heating / year, and how much DHW / year as to which makes most sense.

    FWIW we have diy gshp DHW (~1MWh heat/year)+ rads(4Mwh heat/year), even though financially I'd be best off using Octopus go & storage instead! My longer term plan though is for a hybrid inverter + batt - if only so I can squeeze in some more solar :bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorneelpeel
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: djhno local access to my own consumption data, despite a legal obligation to provide it AIUI).

    Octopus give access to download all your consumption data and do with it as you please. Here is a snippet from a .csv file from my yesterdays usage...

    0.158 2023-02-01T10:00:00+00:00 2023-02-01T10:30:00+00:00
    0.096 2023-02-01T10:30:00+00:00 2023-02-01T11:00:00+00:00
    0.132 2023-02-01T11:00:00+00:00 2023-02-01T11:30:00+00:00
    0.132 2023-02-01T11:30:00+00:00 2023-02-01T12:00:00+00:00
    0.118 2023-02-01T12:00:00+00:00 2023-02-01T12:30:00+00:00
    0.311 2023-02-01T12:30:00+00:00 2023-02-01T13:00:00+00:00

    Not sure about working out the historical Tracker costs. I just did a rough estimate based on the graph and last year's average and looked like I would be quid's in.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: neelpeel
    Posted By: djhno local access to my own consumption data, despite a legal obligation to provide it AIUI).

    Octopus give access to download all your consumption data and do with it as you please. Here is a snippet from a .csv file from my yesterdays usage...
    I think you missed the word 'local' in my description. i.e. not downloaded from some third-party website after being uploaded in the first place through my network without giving me access.
  2.  
    This guy archives all the price data every day for each Octopus tariff and you can graph it or download it to compare with your historic consumption however you like:

    https://www.energy-stats.uk/dashboards/

    There's probably an app to do it all for you, there are people hanging around the OEM forum who are good at that sort of thing.


    BUT you care about future prices, not historic prices. There's a lot of talk that energy prices will be lower this year than last. The energy companies all hedged (prepurchased) energy at last year's prices, so are now paying more than the market rate, which is why Tracker and Agile are cheaper than the fixed tariffs at the moment. That could change at short notice of course. Do you want the certainty of a fixed price (paying extra for the certainty). If Tracker or Agile doesn't work out for you, you can switch back at short notice so the risk is fairly low, but I have learned not to believe financial advice (including this post!)

    Think you can access their Tracker tariff without a smart meter, it doesn't change quite as frequently as their Agile tariff.

    They also have tariffs aimed at heatpump or EV owners with various cheap periods in the afternoon or overnight.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenThis guy archives all the price data every day for each Octopus tariff and you can graph it or download it to compare with your historic consumption however you like:

    https://www.energy-stats.uk/dashboards/
    Thanks. I'd forgotten that site. I just looked at their https://octochargecalc.energy-stats.uk/graph and over the past year it says that I would have paid Agile average per unit cost 29.86p => Agile average per day cost £14.33 to charge my car for seven hours, whereas even after the recent [unfair I scream] price rise for E7 users, I only pay 15.32p per unit. Now I'm not sure I understand exactly how the site calculates its figures (there's lots of pretty but unintelligible graphs) but it seems like I'm significantly better on E7.

    Yes I do also value some stability and predictability, and yes I could get Tracker without a smart meter but then I can be forced to switch to a smart meter if I want to stay on it. And every time I've looked at the EV tariffs, they're worse than E7.
  3.  
    That was my point -
    If you compare with a period including the sky-high prices of last August, then a variable tariff will look expensive.
    If you compare with the month around Christmas then a variable tariff will look cheap (average of cheapest 4 hours each day on Agile = 12.6p).

    Both of those are meaningless comparisons, unless you have inside knowledge that future prices are going to be more like August, or more like Christmas.

    The Bank of England announced today that they expect energy prices to trend down, but they're guessing the same as everyone else.

    Most of us don't have bandwidth to stay on top of this, which is one reason why take-up of ToU tariffs has been slow.

    (Edit to add: their EV tariff is 12p overnight and 43p the rest of the day)
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023 edited
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenIf you compare with a period including the sky-high prices of last August, then a variable tariff will look expensive.
    If you compare with the month around Christmas then a variable tariff will look cheap (average of cheapest 4 hours each day on Agile = 12.6p).
    Sorry I don't understand that. Christmas looks a lot worse. Presumably you're looking at something different. Cheapest four hours is pretty meaningless for usability. Yes I could set up the heating to use the cheapest hours, but the car needs to be plugged in for a continuous period and the longer the better to minimise the number of charges (= the hassle).

    Posted By: WillInAberdeen(Edit to add: their EV tariff is 12p overnight and 43p the rest of the day)
    Yes but their EV 'overnight' is only four hours. E7 is seven, which is much more useful to me both for car charging and for space heating.

    edit: to say that the octochargecalc subsite is returning error 500 at the mo. Maybe the massive traffic from GBF has crashed it :bigsmile::devil:
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeFeb 2nd 2023
     
    When you say assuage a vague feeling of guilt, is it about your remaining heat carbon footprint? If so, as Will suggests, if that footprint is already low, then aren't you stuck because the embedded carbon in any solution you adopt might exceed the savings (or near to it)?

    It's a problem for anyone who has already 'walked the walk' to the extent practicable.

    My own sense is that in this case you might consider offsetting your remaining emissions. There are all kinds of criticisms of offsetting, but they all boil down to the need to do far more of it than calculations suggest.

    We offset three times our entire household's entire carbon emissions, and our house is an energy monster, for the measly sum of £37 per month, because carbon offsetting is cheap. It's probably already nearer four times, but I'll probably up it to five, as then I can be absolutely sure I'm at least offsetting our emissions (given deficiencies in offsetting).

    As it's nearly impossible to reduce a household's emissions to a truly sustainable level in the UK, and we have to think about our historic emissions, I do think this has a role to play.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2023
     
    Posted By: djhBut if I overcame my objections, is there a site somewhere, or a program to download, where I could put in my consumption history and see what it would have cost on the Tracker tariff?
    emoncms has a 'feature' call the Agile App. It pulls in the prices for the AGILE tariffs and compares it against historic consumption so you get an average kWh figure if you had been on that tariff.

    You need to be recording your consumption at a minimum of half-hour use to make it work.

    Over the last 30 days, on the latest AGILE-FLEX in my area, I'd have paid an average of 29p/kWh. Worse than my fixed rate (which ends in August) but still better than the price cap.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2023 edited
     
    Thanks. Hmm, do you have any idea what it means when I get the following when I start the app:

    EmonCMS Error
    -------------
    Message: ReferenceError: path is not defined
    URL: http://emonpi/emoncms/Modules/app/Lib/feed.js?v=
    Line: 33
    Column: 13

    The solar generation app works OK so it's something specific to this app. Where and what is the 'path' variable set?
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2023
     
    Posted By: djhThanks. Hmm, do you have any idea what it means when I get the following when I start the app:
    Take it to the OEM forum, please.
    • CommentAuthorevan
    • CommentTimeFeb 27th 2023 edited
     
    An idea for the OP if they’re still looking for one..

    1) use a Sanden CO2 hot water heat pump. This heats a *large* cylinder up to 60 deg C or more, using a small outdoor unit. It has a “towel rail” takeoff coil. Use this for your duct heater. It obviously also does your hot water. Charge it at night on the cheap tariff.

    2) if the above isn’t available, you can achieve the same thing with a conventional ducted air source cylinder, LG sell a good one. In this case I would suggest using one for your duct and a second one for your hot water. They’re not crazy expensive though. Again, charge off peak as much as possible. Batteries can help time shift the heating load too.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 28th 2023
     
    Posted By: evanuse a Sanden CO2 hot water heat pump
    Is this available in the UK?
    conventional ducted air source cylinder
    Sorry, I'm not sure what one of those is?
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