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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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  1.  
    Dear illustrious Virtual Community.
    many years since posting, living well in our straw bale/timber home heated by wood only. several other small "out" buildings all heated by wood too, new wood burning Rayburn and Finnish soapstone masonry heater.
    It's just that we're getting stiffer and older and there are a devil of a lot of fires to light; not to mention the likes of Monbiot breathing his new Righteous Fervour down our necks. So...

    Thinking Mass/storage heater type of electric back up just for background warmth when/if we're away or when we can't light fires any more. I only know of very expensive German ones controlled "smartly". Is there still an old school version like the ones that used to be full of bricks, does anyone know? Surely these could be reasonably efficient?

    Much appreciate any pointers and my apologies if I've missed an already existing thread,

    Carol
  2.  
    Posted By: Carol hunterIt's just that we're getting stiffer and older

    +1

    Posted By: Carol hunterThinking Mass/storage heater type of electric back up just for background warmth when/if we're away or when we can't light fires any more.

    Sounds like a night storage heater.
    They can still be had - but IMO unless you have night rate or off peak or PV generated electricity there is no advantage of these over an ordinary electric heater. Both have an efficiency (COP) of 1:1 at the point of use.

    If you have a timed cheap rate or PV generated electricity then a storage heater might make sense (heat now / when the sun shines and delay usage by about 6 hours).

    Otherwise without cheap rate electricity what about a small A2A heat pump (that can also give cooling in the summer if needed) which should give a COP of 3:1 or better. Depending upon your view of ROI a COP of more than 3:1 may prove better than a storage heater but difficult to beat a simple fan heater or electric oil filled radiator (on wheels) especially if portability is useful.

    BTW electric storage heaters that I have seen needed a dedicated 16A supply (more for larger ones). Would this cause a problem for your supply?
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024
     
    Dimplex/Creda and various other firms still make them (see e.g. https://www.heatershop.co.uk/storage-heaters ). They all have various 'smart' features referred to a 'Lot20' nowadays and seemingly a very old fashioned view of E7 tariffs where your electricity meter supplies a separately wired 7-hours-only circuit. So they're more complicated and expensive than they used to be and less reliable (they have problems with power cuts, I believe).

    As PiH says, it might be worth looking at a heat pump instead.

    It occurred to me the other day - why don't they make storage heaters that use water to store the heat? Much easier to move than a pile of bricks!
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024
     
    Posted By: Peter_in_Hungary[Storage heaters} have an efficiency (COP) of 1:1 at the point of use
    In terms of kW of heat delivered = kW of electricity used, yes. But in terms of heat that's useful, no. They pump heat out all night, when you prob don't need it, an effect moderated with varying success by mechanical means of impeding the convective component of their output, but on the whole, significant heat wasted.

    Posted By: djhstorage heaters that use water to store the heat?
    Water has half or less the volumetric specific heat of the special solid blocks used, as well as the blocks get a lot hotter than 100C. So prob over 3x more volume, if water.
  3.  
    Posted By: fostertom
    Posted By: Peter_in_Hungary[Storage heaters} have an efficiency (COP) of 1:1 at the point of use
    In terms of kW of heat delivered = kW of electricity used, yes. But in terms of heat that's useful, no. They pump heat out all night, when you prob don't need it, an effect moderated with varying success by mechanical means of impeding the convective component of their output, but on the whole, significant heat wasted.

    Its horses for courses. Storage heaters are insulated and the output is controlled by a fan or (adjustable) natural convection. Whilst some heat is given off when not required (not lost because it is still in the house) significant heat is retained for 6 hours or so. If you are retired or otherwise at home during the day then a storage heater heated over night will provide heat during the day or if heated during the day by PV then heat output can be used in the evening. Yes limitations occur if you heat up over night for use the following evening.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024 edited
     
    Yes, can be gd, just saying it's not quite like the 100% of an instantaneous heater. A super-heavy house will even out peaks and make closer to 100% useful use of xs heat input at unwanted times. But for example no hope of accommodating someone's preference for sleeping with no heating, even window open!

    BTW, original question, is clay a good medium for off-peak storage?
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024 edited
     
    This revives posibilities explored in http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=17058&page=2. Does storage-heater principle rely nowadays on dedicated (separate circuit) off-peak supply? With variable-price tariffs, couldn't an intelligent controller grab lo-tariff power when available, and store it, as an alternative to heat pump? It would of course use more electricity than heat pump, for equivalent comfort, but hopefully at similar, even lower £cost.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024
     
    Posted By: fostertomIn terms of kW of heat delivered = kW of electricity used, yes. But in terms of heat that's useful, no. They pump heat out all night
    Is that true even with modern (HHR) storage heaters?
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeDec 4th 2024
     
    Posted By: fostertomDoes storage-heater principle rely nowadays on dedicated (separate circuit) off-peak supply?
    Yes, that is what I was complaining about. My E7 meter doesn't provide a separate circuit. It's prehistoric! (But Lot20 compliant prehistory :) I think there are ways to work around it, but I haven't investigated.
  4.  
    It can be quite convenient having a deducated E7 supply in some ways. The timer appears to be imnune to power cuts, so you don't have to reset it after every little power flicker or cutlet. That's the major drawback to most electronic timers, at least where we live. They don't seem to have any memory of their previous settings, and don't simply restart when the power comes back on but require the ON button pressing again.

    But if you have an old-fashioned E7 system then ALL electricity used during the E7 period is at the cheaper rate, so any old timer will access it. We used to just run our old washing machine and dishwasher by plugging them into a spur from the E7 circuit. Modern machines have to be reset every use using only their internal timers, not just by turning the power on.
    But a storage heater can be charged through a plug-in timer on an ordinary socket, up to its current rating.


    We used to have an antiquated E7 meter that used an actual mechanical clock for it's timer, electrically rewound. It slowly lost time over the years, so when we inherited it we got electricity at the E7 rate during the daytime.
    • CommentAuthorowlman
    • CommentTimeDec 5th 2024
     
    Do you have Solar PV and/or Solar Thermal? If not, that would be the first stage for me, were I in your position.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeDec 5th 2024
     
    I agree the modern trend for built-in electronic controls is bad. We regularly get power cuts and have to adjust everything after each one. It rapidly becomes annoying.

    Storage heaters now require two mains supplies - a 24-hour one, and an E7 one :(
    • CommentAuthorrevor
    • CommentTimeDec 5th 2024
     
    Posted By: djhStorage heaters now require two mains supplies - a 24-hour one, and an E7 one :(


    If you are with octopus and have an EV all electricity from 11.30pm to 5.30 am is at 7p per unit. I use that to charge my solar battery so use that up during the day. We run the dishwasher and or washer at night also. If it sunny (fat chance recently) solar tops up what we may have used and surplus goes to the grid for 15p credit. So if I was to get storage heaters they would be on their own circuit on a timer timed for the cheap tariff connected to the consumer unit with suitable CB. Currently spend more, or about the same, on standing charge than on the electricity itself.
  5.  
    Just to chime in, on the subject of storing thermal energy in something other than water, there is also the SunAmp heat battery approach which uses Sodium Acetate as the storage medium. This is more 'energy dense' than water, so it can store more heat in a smaller area.

    Not a direct replacement for a storage heater (more like a boiler/water cylinder substitute) but you can use them with an E7 tariff - we charge ours overnight, and I think they can be plumbed into the space heating system.
  6.  
    Posted By: djh
    Posted By: fostertomIn terms of kW of heat delivered = kW of electricity used, yes. But in terms of heat that's useful, no. They pump heat out all night
    Is that true even with modern (HHR) storage heaters?

    They don't 'pump heat out all night' they are an insulated heat store which like any heat store will loose heat at a greater or lesser extent depending upon the quality of the insulation. The 2 types of storage heaters that I have seen have had either louvres to close the air flow and so prevent heat output (other than storage losses), these were manually controlled. The other type had a fan (2 speed) that controlled the heat output, with the fan switched off the only heat loss was storage losses. These could (and were) controlled by a timer switch for the the low speed setting with manual override for the high speed setting. With these the heat output could be delayed 6 - 8 hours and still give useful heat so charge over night and draw heat when you come home from work. The storage losses still went into the house during the day so not a total loss.

    In Carol's position I would be looking very carefully at A2A heat pumps that could give A/C in the summer.
  7.  
    I have a lot of clients in a similar position, with the conumdrum of where to go for automated heating to back-up logs, or replace direct electric panel heaters. The go-to was always storage heaters, and I have provided these for various clients, with a lot of success (improved comfort and reduced elect consumption).

    I now am going to the A2A solution more regularly for various reasons. Considerations that crop up are:

    - storage heaters are expensive items at around £600-£800 each

    - if you haven't insulated reasonably well, there will be a larger number of the storage heaters, and so the power draw will be very large (the charge rate is much higher than the release rate). That can lead to insufficient capacity on a standard single phase domestic supply (explains partly why they were often on their own phase supply with separate breakers etc)

    - ASHP A2W appear to be hugely inflated in terms of the supply installation costs (my belief is installers take advantage of the gov't grants). Disruption for wet rads install is significant, and costs of copper, radiators, labour are huge. (I also include these for some clients, so not poopooing them).

    - ASHP A2A can be had for a fraction of the price, are zero VAT rated like wet ASHP's, have a different supply/install market (more of a commercial refrigerant/aircon focus) and so aren't overweight with grant binging.

    - disruption with A2A installation is relatively low

    - A2A does not allow for storage of energy of course, so harder to take advantage of low rate tariffs, however ASHP is 1/4 running cost of panel heater on daytime. Storage heater would be a bit above 1/2 of that same cost. Ao A2A would be less than 1/2 of running cost of storage heaters.

    - as noted above re. current capacity of your domestic single phase feed, if you go for octopus (which I have, and love it 100%), your car charger will take say 7kW power, which reduces the scope further for storage heater capacity (remember charge rate is higher than rated output).

    - warm air from storage heaters is a bit closer (sensation wise) to the warm air from A2A, so it's not such a leap to having warm air, versus say UFH.

    - A2A not being storage, does have the benefit of being more reactive, and lower risk of charging over night for a day that suddenly is 15oC warmer than the previous day (something not that uncommon these days). Storage heaters are pretty good at retaining heat, but not for 24-48 hours.

    There is no one right answer for all. Every case has to be thought about carefully. The OP did ask for a heating solution, but as pointed out by others, it may be that including batteries in the mix might turn A2A into total winners, as they effectively become storage heaters, that are super responsive, but with a very low relative power draw, overcoming many of the issues raised above.

    I have approached ASHP supply/install companies and had ridiculously high prices offered, compared with aircon companies, who are much more competitive. Caveat emptor.
  8.  
    Can't edit above, due to this ever glitchy forum...

    First paragraph, final sentence should read " ...(improved comfort and reduced elect COSTS).
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeDec 6th 2024
     
    A great 'Guide To ...'
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