I am here as a new user, so first off “hello” . I am looking for some advice and guidance on central heating….. Basically I have a blank piece of paper and am trying to work out what to start with regarding a totally new system.
Background: detached cottage of typical 19th century construction, (9in solid brick walls, single glazed, minimal insulation) with new extension under construction (12in insulated cavity walls, double glazed, heavily insulated). New extension is slightly bigger than the old cottage and brings total floor area (ground and first floor) to about 140msq… so space is at a premium. Old cottage heated by night storage on Economy 7 (ouch). No mains gas etc. Extension is to take new kitchen, 2 bathrooms (one en-suite), heating system etc. with provision to supply the old side with heat and an occasional use bathroom in due course. Intention is to use under floor heating in the downstairs of the new bit as the floor slab is insulated, with radiators elsewhere. There will also be a multi-fuel type log burner of at least 4-5kw in the centre of the house providing radiant heat to both old and new sides in the winter months. The kitchen is due to have a cast iron type cooking range installed giving further background heat….
Decisions, decisions: this is where I have got pretty stuck…. Originally we were spec’ing for air source heat pump, but having looked at the cost of install that now seems unlikely. We don’t have enough roof area for solar panels (double pitched with shallow valley) or enough land for ground source. Which has kinda left us looking at (tank fed) oil or gas boilers. This is where it got slightly more tricky owing to the cooking range…. we are coming down to thinking that if we are fitting a range cooker anyway, why not fit a combined cooker / central heating boiler like the Redfyre central heating range cooker – they claim SAP rating in band B with efficiency in the 80% area which isn’t too horrendous. This saves a massive amount of cash (and space) over fitting a range cooker AND a separate modern central heating boiler. We were also thinking of using an unvented mains pressure hot water cylinder. Whatever we use I am quiet keen to have it only just produce enough heat so that I get lots of opportunities to use the log burner (free heat and that warm cosy feeling just can’t be beaten).
So, where do I start??? Try and work out heat loss calcs for the whole house so that I can size a boiler and go from there? Am I going down the wrong route to opt for a central heating range cooker? If I have a range cooker in the kitchen which is all open plan to the dining area and open to the log burner, am I going to need underfloor heating? The area of the open plan space is about 3.5sqm and all of modern well insulated construction. Whilst the floor will be tiled, I am worried that I may end up over-heating the area and never actually use the underfloor heating, in which case I would do well to save the cash and just fit an appropriate (and cheap!) radiator. Range cookers seem to produce upto about 1kw of radiant heat idling. Does anyone know whether a central heating range could actually run underfloor heating and do all the domestic hot water etc. SO many questions – sorry! I hope someone here can help steer me in the right direction and give me some pointers on where to start.
Background: detached cottage of typical 19th century construction, (9in solid brick walls, single glazed, minimal insulation) with new extension under construction (12in insulated cavity walls, double glazed, heavily insulated). New extension is slightly bigger than the old cottage and brings total floor area (ground and first floor) to about 140msq… so space is at a premium. Old cottage heated by night storage on Economy 7 (ouch). No mains gas etc. Extension is to take new kitchen, 2 bathrooms (one en-suite), heating system etc. with provision to supply the old side with heat and an occasional use bathroom in due course. Intention is to use under floor heating in the downstairs of the new bit as the floor slab is insulated, with radiators elsewhere. There will also be a multi-fuel type log burner of at least 4-5kw in the centre of the house providing radiant heat to both old and new sides in the winter months. The kitchen is due to have a cast iron type cooking range installed giving further background heat….
Decisions, decisions: this is where I have got pretty stuck…. Originally we were spec’ing for air source heat pump, but having looked at the cost of install that now seems unlikely. We don’t have enough roof area for solar panels (double pitched with shallow valley) or enough land for ground source. Which has kinda left us looking at (tank fed) oil or gas boilers. This is where it got slightly more tricky owing to the cooking range…. we are coming down to thinking that if we are fitting a range cooker anyway, why not fit a combined cooker / central heating boiler like the Redfyre central heating range cooker – they claim SAP rating in band B with efficiency in the 80% area which isn’t too horrendous. This saves a massive amount of cash (and space) over fitting a range cooker AND a separate modern central heating boiler. We were also thinking of using an unvented mains pressure hot water cylinder. Whatever we use I am quiet keen to have it only just produce enough heat so that I get lots of opportunities to use the log burner (free heat and that warm cosy feeling just can’t be beaten).
So, where do I start??? Try and work out heat loss calcs for the whole house so that I can size a boiler and go from there? Am I going down the wrong route to opt for a central heating range cooker? If I have a range cooker in the kitchen which is all open plan to the dining area and open to the log burner, am I going to need underfloor heating? The area of the open plan space is about 3.5sqm and all of modern well insulated construction. Whilst the floor will be tiled, I am worried that I may end up over-heating the area and never actually use the underfloor heating, in which case I would do well to save the cash and just fit an appropriate (and cheap!) radiator. Range cookers seem to produce upto about 1kw of radiant heat idling. Does anyone know whether a central heating range could actually run underfloor heating and do all the domestic hot water etc. SO many questions – sorry! I hope someone here can help steer me in the right direction and give me some pointers on where to start.