- Joined
- Jan 1, 2018
- Messages
- 5,068
- Reaction score
- 4,961
- Location
- Fernhurst Sussex
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 40 plus 23 that I maintain for clients.
Well put enrico, I would reiterate everything you have said especially with houses that do not have mains gas.Time for me to say something!
I have lived in many old houses. They have been heated with gas, oil, totally woodburners and now the present one has an ASHP.
I can say that my present house is the most consistently warmest and most comfortable we have lived in. It was built in 1850 and has single skin walls. When we moved in it had an old oil boiler and an illegal oil tank so we had to spend money on getting it replaced. I did my homework and sought advice. I had three heat surveys and quotes done and soon realised there were cowboys out there. We finally settled on a company we could trust and had all the radiators replaced with larger ones. Insulated everything that needed insulating, had a proper sized ashp installed and have never looked back. That was six years ago. We also had PV panels installed at the same time which have supplemented the costs and last year had batteries which have also helped no end.
You have to do your research and get the right company. It is not cheap. I was lucky to be able to claim RHI which has paid ALL my electric costs for the whole house for six years but that aside the ASHP is not expensive to run. I have made sure that I am running it in the correct way (Weather compensation mode) that lowers or highers the temperature depending on outside temperatures. I have made sure I am on the most economical tariff when it comes to electricity. I have made sure I know how the system works best for my situation and am more than happy with the costs and the way it runs. I would never choose any other form of heating. No worries about carbon monoxide or filling tanks with gas or oil. You can produce your own electricity if you can afford the outlay. I long decided that although new technologies are expensive to put in, they help sell your house when you move and in our case have always added value.
You have to do your homework. You have to be prepared to spend money on insulation and on proper size radiators, you have to have confidence in the installer and you have to put some effort into running it properly. It is a big investment so get it right.
If you do all that you will live in a warm comfortable house for a reasonable cost. It is a different mindset to normal heating so be prepared to learn new stuff.
I am very happy to answer any questions on any of the technology or items raised if anyone wants to PM me.
When we installed systems to replace gas the savings were marginal but when installed in rural properties they were very significant.
A mate has just moved into a small estate of luxury properties on the outskirts of my village and almost didn't buy the property because they had heat pumps. He now is an evangelist for the technology!