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#1491 | |
Master EcoRenovator
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Toronto
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![]() Quote:
We have fin tube "convectors" which is just a 3/4" copper tube with 3" square aluminum fins on them which could be anywhere from 2' to 10' long. They usually are designed to run at a minimum of 60C and up to 90C, so not very efficient. Along with cast iron rads they were often used with oil boilers. I don't remember ever seeing this type of convector anywhere in Europe during my travels. Your panel rads are way more efficient than the convectors and equal to or slightly more efficient than the cast iron rads but the big definer is how many m2 of radiator surface area for a given room which is why floor heating is such a good low temp system. |
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#1492 | |
Supreme EcoRenovator
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![]() Quote:
But not all m2's of radiant floor are created equal. Here is a thermal image of two different under floor installations (which I am not so fond of). The left side of the image shows a floor with spreader plates, the right side shows a floor with no spreader plate. The heat per m2 is an average of the heat coming off the floor. If the spacing is wide, or if the conductivity of the floor is low (for instance, no spreaders) the heat output will be highly varied across the floor surface, so the feed temp will need to go higher to give the required BTUs per m2. The higher feed temp will affect a fossil fuel burner to some degree, but it will affect a heat pump to a much higher degree by reducing it's efficiency. -AC
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#1493 |
Master EcoRenovator
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![]() My favorite way to do underfloor heating is with a gypsum cement (screed in the UK) then some engineered wood, tile or linoleum over top. If there is no other way then attacking it from below is OK but the extra wood is higher insulation value.
Jim, how thick is the wood over the heat plates? |
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#1494 |
Supreme EcoRenovator
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![]() I should have said that under subfloor is not my favorite. A wet system like you are describing is a whole different story.
-AC
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#1495 |
Lurking Renovator
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Shetland
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![]() We have 3/4" tongue and grove floorboards with 8-10mm laminate floor laid over the top, so probably just a little over 1" in total. There are a couple of problems with doing a wet fit from above:-
I'm really not worried about the radiators, there is plenty of scope for fitting larger units, or space is more limited, upgrading to double panels. and seriously, the areas covered with radiators rarely have them turned up at the moment. |
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#1496 | |
Lurking Renovator
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![]() Quote:
Since 22/8/2007 I have purchased 21,115 ltrs of domestic heating oil. that's 10.122 ltr per day. 1 gal of domestic heating oil produces 138,500 BTU per US Gal Converting my 10.122 ltr per day to US Gallons gives 2.67 which is therefore 401092 BTU per day or 16712 BTU per hour. My boiler is listed as having 85% efficiency so actual heat output is 14,205 BTU per hour. Do those calculations make sense or am I missing something? Regards Jim |
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#1497 |
Master EcoRenovator
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![]() Hmmm, not really. Your math doesn't account for variations in outdoor temps and indoor temp, number of running hours in a year, DHW vs space heat (assuming oil is doing both), solar gain, wind losses on walls.
The simplest way (but least accurate) is to look a the walls, roof, floor and find, on the web, local buildings with he same construction make an educated guess compared to those buildings. Not great but it will be closer than what you have done already. I can say that in shetland the low temp is around-1C and is rarely below that so perhaps we are looking at half the heat load of Toronto. Most reasonable insulated houses here have a load of about 30-40w/m2 so perhaps you would be 25w/m2 or so....at design temp so you would have to supply 3kw (very low). It is within the realm of an ASHP. The GSHP in my mind is a waste of material and time. |
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#1498 | |
Supreme EcoRenovator
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![]() Quote:
Regarding the purpose of this thread (The Homemade Heat Pump Manifesto), namely how to create a working heat pump from some other source, with DIY ground source heating being the ultimate aim, these posts are way off topic. Marksolar and Northern Driver, there is no other place on the Internet which invites and encourages experimenters to work with heat pump conversion, and also to DIY their own ground source loop field. This thread is very precious real estate, and you are occupying this space with off-topic posts. Mikesolar, your opinion about GSHP is just that, your opinion. If you would like to discuss this more fully on another thread, I would welcome that. Northern Driver, since you have not actually made up your mind to use a heat pump at all, you are taking up space that would be better used by people who have made such a decision and are seeking information on how to actually proceed. If either or both of you start another thread, or append this conversation to the DIY Radiant Heating for instance, and contact Daox, he can easily move your posts to that new thread. Thank you for your cooperation... Sincerely, -AC_Hacker
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I'm not an HVAC technician. In fact, I'm barely even a hacker... Last edited by AC_Hacker; 05-20-13 at 11:31 AM.. |
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#1499 |
Lurking Renovator
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![]() AC,
You are of course correct. There are other threads in this forum that suit these recent posts better. My original post was about the suitability of a compressor I found on ebay "Samsung R22 Rotary air conditioning refrigeration cooling compressor 48A124JV1EG". Samsung R22 Rotary air conditioning refrigeration cooling compressor 48A124JV1EG | eBay By combining your post about the degree days with my latest calculations converting oil consumption to BTU, then it would seem like this unit with its peak output arroud 24000 btu/h is not hugely over rated for my needs. and with our current rate of electricity charges even if run continuously would still cost less than the oil. |
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#1500 |
Master EcoRenovator
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![]() AC, I am all for GSHP's and experimenting with them. I only wanted to point out that the conditions that make GS suitable also apply to ASHPs, in this case.
Of course, there should have been a new thread about this install. I don't know about that particular compressor and whether you can get replacements if need be. I would be looking for a Danfoss or Copeland if possible but that is just my opinion. |
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Tags |
air conditioner, diy, gshp, heat pump, homemade |
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