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Posted By: sgt_wouldsThey require careful detailing and sealing to work effectively.Yes, from having done airtightness I know that's not easy on a renovation. And stopping moisture is trickier than stopping air. Then the VCL would have to stay undamaged for the next few decades.
Posted By: sgt_wouldsSome smart membrane manufacturers offer free WUFI studies if you specify and use their membranes:That's certainly interesting to know - I used Pro Clima Mento as part of the airtightness on this project.
Posted By: sgt_wouldsI'd also recommend speaking to Chris or Andy at 'Back to Earth'And another interesting tip, thanks.
Posted By: djhWhat temperatures and humidities have you assumed above and below the ceiling? I see the times are in the past, so did you measure them?The external temperatures are based on real ones from the local 2009-2020 weather data. Not sure exactly how WUFI uses them, but from the dates on the graph I'd guess that it's using the actual data from those years.
Posted By: djhwe used Intello+ in our roof and what's now called Solitex UM connect on the outside, under the standing seam. ...I have no idea whether it provides any tangible benefits.I have seen a couple of WUFI studies comparing elements with and without smart VCLS; I may have a one filed away somewhere on my PC. From memory, they had the effect of smoothing the highs and lows, but weren't dropping the HR behind them radically. But the Solitex UM Connect on the outside would certainly be very helpful.
Posted By: djhisn't the space above the ceiling internal rather than external? In which case measuring that seems like the best approach too.Yes, it is, but at the moment there is no ceiling, so I can't measure it yet. It may be worth putting some sensors up their when I install it though, if I can find something suitable. Anyone know of a university that may be interested?
Posted By: djhIf I'm reading the graph correctly it's saying the humidity under the ceiling is pretty much always between 70% and 75%? That seems way too high for the inside of a building even without an MVHR. With an MVHR I'd expect it to normally be between 40% and 50% and never higher than 60%. Something's weird.Well spotted! That could be the key to the problem. I was reading 'point A' as being above the plasterboard, but checking the text it does say that it is 'a control point to represent the impact of the indoor environment' - which probably does mean that it is on the underside, in the room. If so, that does indeed look very wrong. I'll go back to the consultant and check that.
Posted By: djhFor calibrating MVHR, I use 30 m³/hr per person rather than an ACH figure.I calculated it various ways (litres per person, by room and by volume using UK, French, German, Passivhaus and ACECB guidelines). The volume in this case is only around 90 to 100 m³, so using your 30 m³/h that would be roughly 0.33 ACH, compared to my 0.42, so we're not too far apart on that :)
Posted By: sgt_wouldsFrom your build-up, (hard to see the text) it looks like you have a service void between the plasterboard and insulation.Actually only about 50% of the ceiling area has a void - the diagram was for modelling the 'worst case'.
Posted By: sgt_wouldsI know that in in Europe, some ventilated roofs (eaves and ridge ventilation but over 10m length) are required to have additional measures, such as connection to forced ventilation which may include MVHR. There must be some information 'out there' about effective strategies for force ventilation of narrow cavities.That's interesting to know and would certainly be worth trying to track down. Otherwise I've been thinking that irrigation drip-pipes, or the equivalent in small diameter waste pipe, tapped into the ceiling plenums, might be worth experimenting with.
Posted By: Mike1Internal temperature and humidity used are based on ASHRAE 160 - not something I've studied, and I know that there are other options, but presume that's a reasonable choice.Turns out that this was not a reasonable choice at all. ASHRAE 160 can take into account air changes, but only at external temperature & RH, modified only by heating or aircon - there's no MVHR or other heat exchange option. That makes it very driven by building volume, and for a small volume like mine the internal climate generated is sub-tropical - in my case forecasting year-round internal RH at about 70%. Which is nuts.
Posted By: Mike1In fact, there's nothing in WUFI that can properly simulate an MVHR internal climate. Apparently the entire building would need to be simulated in WUFI Plus (€1,790.00 + VAT for a 1-year license) to achieve that.Surely WUFI Passive must deal with an MVHR? I don't think there are many without one!
Posted By: Mike1I'm wondering whether any of you may have MVHR and logged temperature and humidity data, and may be willing to share it?I have internal T&H data logged from last November. I've got three external readings since 2018 or so - one is my own in an outdoor cupboard; one is a neighbour's weather station, which goes offline for a day or more at a time sometimes, and the third is Wattisham airbase which is pretty reliable but six miles away.
Posted By: djhSurely WUFI Passive must deal with an MVHR?It does, and uses WUFI Plus in the calculation:
Posted By: djhI have internal T&H data logged from last November... ...I can show you more graphs to your specification or send you CSV data if you wantThat's excellent news! I'd be very happy to plough through the CSV data :)
Posted By: Mike1That's excellent news! I'd be very happy to plough through the CSV data :)If you whisper me an email address I'll see what I can do.
Posted By: Mike1BTW, what are you logging with? I'm thinking of buying a batch of sensors in the next week or so, to bury in the ceiling before in insulation goes in - probably DHT22s wired up to Rasperry Pi.The main logging system is an OpenEnergyMonitor system < https://openenergymonitor.org/ > an emonbase and two emonTx - they've recently updated the range so a new configuration might well be different. The emonbase is basically a pi plus a radio so I also run some scripts on it to import data from various places including the local weather station (screen scraping) and the met office DataPoint API for Wattisham. I have another pi (PiZeroW) outside with a T&H sensor attached that posts data to the emonbase. There's an emonTH that supplies the internal T&H data, although I've recently acquired a bunch of Govee T&H sensors that I intend to include fairly soon.
Posted By: djhThe main logging system is an OpenEnergyMonitor system < https://openenergymonitor.org/ >I'll certainly take a look at that, as I've not progressed the thought process much beyond the sensors.
Posted By: Mike1Just been taking a deeper look as sensors, and the BME280, which looks good and is well priced (if they're genuine). The BME680 seems less common and costs 3x as muchYes, the difference is the VOC sensing built-in to the BME680; if you don't need that the 280 is as good ISTR.
I then came across the SHT30-DIS-F (and some in the newer SHT4 range), which incorporates a PTFE film to protect it from contamination, which would be a plus. The sensors are cheap enough, but I haven't spotted anyone selling one on a PCB yetAh, I'd forgotten the SHT4 range. Adafruit sell them on little PCBs, among others. There's also the SCD4 CO2 sensor range.
Posted By: Mike1However I then came across the SHT30-DIS-F (and some in the newer SHT4 range), which incorporates a PTFE film to protect it from contamination, which would be a plus.
Posted By: djhI'd forgotten the SHT4 range. Adafruit sell them on little PCBs
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