Stinsy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 8:07 pm
Joeboy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 7:45 pm
Stinsy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 7:20 pm
SH are great in many ways:
- Shift usage into cheap period powered by Octopus’ generous ToU tariffs.
- Multi-decade reliability with zero maintenance.
They are a really great part of the puzzle when transitioning form burning FF locally to an all-electric house while maximising offpeak:peak ratio.
However once you’ve achieved the above, the next step is to reduce the amount of off-peak electric you consume, and a HP is a really great way to do that. The 300-400% efficiency and low/slow power usage means that a HP plays nicely with a battery/inverter too.
Once I'm up & running I'll see if we can set up a curve that benefits the overnight slots by a degree in temp on the ashp. Defo running a TRV on our bedroom rad. The rest we will let equalise. I'm interested in seeing what the ashp will modulate down to?
HPs generally modulate down to 25% of their nameplate capacity. The stories you read in the press with people finding their HP expensive to run tend to be: oversized units cycling on and off frequently because they’re unable to modulate down low enough, and people using them like a gas boiler switching on-and-off several times a day.
It seems to me that it is best to fit an undersized HP and rely on secondary heating (log burner, resistive electric, etc.) on the very coldest days.
Hope you don't mind Stinsy, I quoted you to this thread?
The heat calc for the house comes out at 7.94kW with an.outdoor temp of minus 4.74degs. This is based on the lowest Uw value possible in the heat cal software which is 1.0. Our windows of which there are 26 sqmtrs have a Uw of 0.7...
The HP specified is a 7kW unit.
The heat calc has us down for these consumption figures 5,471kWh consumed for home heating.
(17,124kWh generated SCOP 4.13)
1,396kWh consumed for dhw.
(5,094 kWh generated SCOP 3.65)
All above combined is 29,085kWh generated for 6,867kWh consumed, a theoretical combined SCOP.of 4.12.
For posterity, using Nov & Dec 23 home use figures to complete the 2024 year we would be 19,000kWh bought from the grid across the complete year.
Going out on a limb of guesstimate I can say 4,000kWh on EV charging, 120 days full home stack charge, call it 5,000kWh. That leaves 10,000kWh for home & dhw heating on a 1:1 basis in 2024.
Going on the projected SCOP. and consumption figures we can hope to drop the annual use incl EV and stack charging to 14,000kWh.
Hoping that the current battery pack(s) will have the legs to run the whole show at 7p per kWh we would be £480 for the year heating & DHW. Considering we generate about 8,000kWh at home and can bank a lot of that to the VB any imbalance in consumption through season will be nulled out.
These figures will improve I think due to the improved spec of the to be installed 3g and we intend to fully embrace the concept of low & slow as SWMBO has said she still wants the WBS on in the evening (fair enough). It will be interesting to see how these two pieces of technology, one ancient and one new work together?
I've still to get my head around the fact that dhw is going to be supplied on a multiplier.and that our faithful solar boost will no longer be required!
So the power that used to go straight to hwt 7 months of the year will now be sold to the grid in whichever export contract presents. Anyone looking for an inexpensive solar water heater fitted with a robotic app controlled demand finger(switchbot)?
On the opposite side so to speak our 40kWh battery stack won't be exporting much to the grid in Wintertime as its going to be needed to run the ASHP. If it does modulate down to 25% of its capacity that's 1.75kW of power demand of which I can expect 500W from the PV even in Winter generation conditions. That power draw on the 3.6kW hybrid inverter points me firmly at a 5kW hybrid inverter come the day. The current unit is 6 years old, I think they last about 10 years?
I'm pretty sure I asked Iain what he sees in load when his 9kW unit is running low & slow but I can't remember the answer and photos aren't showing up for me.
Anyway I hope these wittering are of some use. They certainly help focus my mind.
P.S, guys on here showing 500W load when running low. Not sure what size of unit they are running. Our big A2AHP out here runs as low as 400W. I have hopes!
https://community.openenergymonitor.org ... read/21891
P.P.S That fella has a 5kW unit and the floor is 450W for him.