Gilberdyke John
Queen Bee
- Joined
- May 5, 2013
- Messages
- 5,756
- Reaction score
- 2,051
- Location
- HU15 East Yorkshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 10
We are being persuaded to replace boilers with heat pumps as a national policy. In fact when my old oil boiler approached the end of its life I took the step, encouraged by Renewable Heat Initiative grant towards the cost. As my system has an Air Source Heat Pump which delivers hot water to the radiators at a much lower temperature than the oil boiler did the project included changing the radiators to one's with appropriately larger heat emission areas.
After using the system for a while it became evident that comfort conditions in the house were vastly inferior to the oil system. Response time to attaining desired daytime temperature from night time setback indoors is very much slower plus the efficiency of the heat pump drops off as outside air temperature falls. The response from most industry sources is to run with a setback only a couple of degrees lower than daytime so maintaining very little difference in heat loss indoors to outdoors.
I'm by no means a thermodynamics guru but surely this in/out delta t is wasteful and has a significant negative effect on the efficiency? Increase in insulation may reduce the losses but heating a building when residents are either tucked up in bed or out at work seems wasteful.
If Derek M reads this perhaps he can comment?
After using the system for a while it became evident that comfort conditions in the house were vastly inferior to the oil system. Response time to attaining desired daytime temperature from night time setback indoors is very much slower plus the efficiency of the heat pump drops off as outside air temperature falls. The response from most industry sources is to run with a setback only a couple of degrees lower than daytime so maintaining very little difference in heat loss indoors to outdoors.
I'm by no means a thermodynamics guru but surely this in/out delta t is wasteful and has a significant negative effect on the efficiency? Increase in insulation may reduce the losses but heating a building when residents are either tucked up in bed or out at work seems wasteful.
If Derek M reads this perhaps he can comment?