Just a sanity check.
This is for a house in scotland, 2 storeys, sandstone, internal 9.5 x 8.5 metres and storey heights 2.8 and 2.5m. 2 bathrooms, 2 shower rooms.
Currently, there's an ancient oil boiler and ancient oil tank. No mains gas.
I want a heating system that will still be viable in 20 years time, so I don't favour oil at all. I've considered heat pumps and thrown that idea out too because it's a listed building, not suitable for underfloor heating.
I had a few ideas, sent them to a company that provides buffer tank systems and between us, this is what we have come up with:
Multi-fuel stove in kitchen 21kW max of which 14kW is water boiler gravity feed to Tank 1.
A 48kWh fan-assisted storage heater in the hall
2 x 500 litre stainless steel buffer tanks
4 x custom immersion heaters able to heat to 95C (3 on Econ-7 only)
Pumped heat transfer between the tanks
Central heating rads running off Tank 2
Hot water off Tank 1 from plate heat exchanger then anti-scald valve
and the calculations:
online boiler sizing calculators give me a figure like 56kW. That sounds like a lot to me, as currently, we're in a bigger house with a 30kW gas boiler. I don't want the system to be capable of T-shirt conditions in winter, so I'm deliberately under-sizing.
My peak demand estimate: 8 hours at 30kW + 8 hours at 10kW
Total 320kWh per day.
To meet the demand: Stove 10 hours at 21kW = 210
plus 47 and 48 from the buffer tanks and storage heater respectively makes a total of 305. It's a fraction under but I have a plan just in case: while doing the re-wiring, we will put cables in for additional storage heaters in bedrooms and install them later if needed.
Not everybody would like it because to get sufficient heating for winter, you have to run the stove. However, it suits us fine. So, is there a gotcha somewhere?
This is for a house in scotland, 2 storeys, sandstone, internal 9.5 x 8.5 metres and storey heights 2.8 and 2.5m. 2 bathrooms, 2 shower rooms.
Currently, there's an ancient oil boiler and ancient oil tank. No mains gas.
I want a heating system that will still be viable in 20 years time, so I don't favour oil at all. I've considered heat pumps and thrown that idea out too because it's a listed building, not suitable for underfloor heating.
I had a few ideas, sent them to a company that provides buffer tank systems and between us, this is what we have come up with:
Multi-fuel stove in kitchen 21kW max of which 14kW is water boiler gravity feed to Tank 1.
A 48kWh fan-assisted storage heater in the hall
2 x 500 litre stainless steel buffer tanks
4 x custom immersion heaters able to heat to 95C (3 on Econ-7 only)
Pumped heat transfer between the tanks
Central heating rads running off Tank 2
Hot water off Tank 1 from plate heat exchanger then anti-scald valve
and the calculations:
online boiler sizing calculators give me a figure like 56kW. That sounds like a lot to me, as currently, we're in a bigger house with a 30kW gas boiler. I don't want the system to be capable of T-shirt conditions in winter, so I'm deliberately under-sizing.
My peak demand estimate: 8 hours at 30kW + 8 hours at 10kW
Total 320kWh per day.
To meet the demand: Stove 10 hours at 21kW = 210
plus 47 and 48 from the buffer tanks and storage heater respectively makes a total of 305. It's a fraction under but I have a plan just in case: while doing the re-wiring, we will put cables in for additional storage heaters in bedrooms and install them later if needed.
Not everybody would like it because to get sufficient heating for winter, you have to run the stove. However, it suits us fine. So, is there a gotcha somewhere?