Barge Pilot
Member
- Posts
- 24
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- Holland
Amen.Buying the new bits is the easiest part, its getting off your arse that many of us struggle with.
Col
Amen.Buying the new bits is the easiest part, its getting off your arse that many of us struggle with.
Col
Oh come on Steve - you're nearly done.And anyway i'm slower than all of you.
I'm sorry to say I've only got tales of woe at the moment.Hi Stretch, how's the shed coming along? Or, for that matter, the other projects?
cheers
I agree - I'm just one of the first to fall because of the poor state of my house!I think you're in a situation that many of us will be finding ourselves in soon
Heat recovery system sounds interesting - hope you can share your plans?
three phase motors are more efficient
It is a crazy scale here - current building regs will give you about a C label I think. I think it is daft to allow people to build such energy inefficient buildings if you've actually managed to come up with a plan to measure how energy efficient homes are - I think (much like the washing machines) you can now get A+ and A++ and A+++ categories. It is already "illegal" to connect gas supplies to new builds so they have to be electric heated - paying for that in a house with only C energy rated insulation isn't going to be funny (especially as the prices for electricity produced by windmills is fixed with the rising gas prices here!)Good luck with plans, we have energy ratings over here too can’t imagine what you need to get to A
The shed has a super size roof for solar, I’m currently installing a 300w wind turbine to top up solar panels on our allotment site these also cheap. Is your situation suitable for either of these , looks like one side of your roof gets some sun
Oh disaster - I hope this isn't contagious.Oh **** my supplier Bulb just gone into administration
I hate to say this but after 40 years in the building industry I have yet to come across a heat recovery system that actually works.
I have seen the stats, calculations and bumph but never seen real differences in user benefits.
Hey SteveOh **** my supplier Bulb just gone into administration
They can work but they are mostly relatively low efficiency. The Hi airflow systems I had maintained before only have a maximum temperature recovery rate of about +2C or 4% max at the supply end.I hate to say this but after 40 years in the building industry I have yet to come across a heat recovery system that actually works.
I have seen the stats, calculations and bumph but never seen real differences in user benefits.
Thanks for adding this informationThey can work but they are mostly relatively low efficiency. The Hi airflow systems I had maintained before only have a maximum temperature recovery rate of about +2C or 4% max at the supply end.
These are simple fluid transfer systems to be fair and cover their running and maintenance costs and eventually capital costs.
The Thermal Wheel systems now appearing seem to be a lot more efficient but I not seen any solid numbers for them as yet from experience as we haven't tried them due to some inherent issues relevant to our application, just claims which seem quite high.
Well I hope I manage to get something to work a bit better than that! In a domestic setting it would be like having an airco unit fighting with the heating - it would be like blowing air out of a fridge into your living space...The +2C figure I was talking about was from the heat recovery battery just before your main heating battery.
ie the incoming air is say 5C, the heat recovery system puts +2C to make it 7C and then your main battery brings it up to temperature 16C-20C
so it just saves your fuel for heating about 2C of the incoming air. For large industrial systems this is worthwhile doing because of the energy costs involved.
You can't take this info as read for every system, I am talking about large industrial tempered air systems which operate at LPHV which probably don't equate directly to house systems and only fluid transfer systems which are not particularly highly efficient, I doubt you would have a thermal wheel in a house either.
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