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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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#2
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![]() "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft |
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On Tue, 18 May 2021 11:34:53 +0100, "tim..."
wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. |
#4
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On 18/05/2021 11:34, tim... wrote:
"Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft ArtStudents„˘ like to build a houses interior decor and layout before they do the foundations or the roof. -- Gun Control: The law that ensures that only criminals have guns. |
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On 18/05/2021 11:42, Scott wrote:
On Tue, 18 May 2021 11:34:53 +0100, "tim..." wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. It's worse than that. A gas boiler is 80-96% efficient. Generating electricity from fossil fuel is ~30% taking into account generation and transmission. Until we are 60+% non-fossil fuelled electricity generation more carbon will be thrown into the atmosphere if we are force to move to electric heating. 1) Yes I know air/ground sourced heating is available with improved efficiency. 2) Car battery charging is going to require more electrical generation which is already limited and no plans to build more generating plant. |
#6
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In article ,
tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. -- *Just give me chocolate and nobody gets hurt Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#7
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In article ,
Fredxx wrote: Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. It's worse than that. A gas boiler is 80-96% efficient. Generating electricity from fossil fuel is ~30% taking into account generation and transmission. Is this really the case with electricity generated with gas, so like for like? And how about the energy used to get the gas from wherever to your house? If making meaningful comparisons, best to start with a level playing field. -- *I used to have an open mind but my brains kept falling out * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#8
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On 18/05/2021 13:44, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Fredxx wrote: Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. It's worse than that. A gas boiler is 80-96% efficient. Generating electricity from fossil fuel is ~30% taking into account generation and transmission. Is this really the case with electricity generated with gas, so like for like? I guess overall there is little to choose from, apart from a lot of complex hardware at each end. And how about the energy used to get the gas from wherever to your house? Good question. The thing with gas is the pipelines are used to even out use over time, essentially a means of storage. If making meaningful comparisons, best to start with a level playing field. I agree, but not everyone is going to have access to ground or allowed to place large fan units on their building. I would wager that most systems will have a cooling capability, which will increase electricity consumption in the summer. |
#9
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On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. It depends on what you mean by pollution? There are places where NOx emissions are significant from NG boilers. Perhaps ban them from cities? :-) until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. Why when generating electricity creates more CO2? |
#10
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In article ,
Fredxx wrote: On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. It depends on what you mean by pollution? There are places where NOx emissions are significant from NG boilers. Perhaps ban them from cities? :-) Any NOx generation may be regarded as significant. The amount a boiler generates can also depend on its age and condition. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. Why when generating electricity creates more CO2? Well, electricity can do most things where energy is needed. Gas not so - unless that nice Mr Bayliss also invented a gas radio. -- *I see you've set aside this special time to humiliate yourself in public Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#11
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As I said in another thread, it won't happen, at least not at much of a
speed as everyone will get their boilers fitted before hand and its going to be theier slow demise that they hope will allow time to ramp up generation, but Unless they use portable nuclear I cannot see how, Turn the English channel into a tidal power station perhaps? grin. Brian -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "tim..." wrote in message ... "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft |
#12
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On 18/05/2021 16:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Fredxx wrote: On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. It depends on what you mean by pollution? There are places where NOx emissions are significant from NG boilers. Perhaps ban them from cities? :-) Any NOx generation may be regarded as significant. The amount a boiler generates can also depend on its age and condition. The newer ones are worse. Old boilers with an excess of air had a colder flame and produced less NOx. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. Why when generating electricity creates more CO2? Well, electricity can do most things where energy is needed. Gas not so - unless that nice Mr Bayliss also invented a gas radio. Yes it can do more things but at a cost, such as producing more CO2. I thought we wanted to decrease CO2 production, not advocate an increase. |
#13
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![]() "Scott" wrote in message ... On Tue, 18 May 2021 11:34:53 +0100, "tim..." wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. Gas isn't the worst non-renewable So, It isn't just the amount of electricity that's produced by gas that's important, it's the amount that produced by anything that isn't renewable. and whilst the amount of the current electricity demand is moving to renewable, where's the supply for the 100% increase [1] in amount needed when everybody move from gas to electric, going to come from? tim [1] I use approx the same number of kWh of gas per year, space and water heating, as I do electric on everything else. And I have a *very* well insulated house. |
#14
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. Assuming you are talking about public health considerations, that surely has to be a tiny effect until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. given that gas is one of the fuels that we use to make electricity, and making electricity costs money it's simple economics that supply of manufactured electricity will cost more than raw gas It's expecting anything else that is daft |
#15
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On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. That's mostly down to the second law of thermodynamics. Efficiency = (input temp - output temp)/(input temp) for a heat engine. A gas power station is 30-50% efficient, the rest being waste heat unless you can use it for something like district heating. -- Max Demian |
#16
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On 19/05/2021 12:25, Max Demian wrote:
A gas power station is 30-50% efficient, the rest being waste heat unless you can use it for something like district heating. OCGT is 37%¸ strap a steam boiler in the exhaust (CCGT) and its over 60% when run constantly as baseload. Of course, when run in 'whore's drawers' mode to back up intermittent renewables, its back down to not much over 45%... -- €śIdeas are inherently conservative. They yield not to the attack of other ideas but to the massive onslaught of circumstance" - John K Galbraith |
#17
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In article ,
tim... wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. Assuming you are talking about public health considerations, that surely has to be a tiny effect When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. given that gas is one of the fuels that we use to make electricity, and making electricity costs money How much does wind cost? it's simple economics that supply of manufactured electricity will cost more than raw gas That depends on how much the gas costs to find and extract. At one time it was an unwanted by product of oil extraction. And may well still be subsidised by that. It's expecting anything else that is daft -- *A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#18
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In article ,
Max Demian wrote: On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. That's mostly down to the second law of thermodynamics. Efficiency = (input temp - output temp)/(input temp) for a heat engine. A gas power station is 30-50% efficient, the rest being waste heat unless you can use it for something like district heating. If that is the case, burning it directly to heat our homes etc makes more sense. -- *When it rains, why don't sheep shrink? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#19
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On 19/05/2021 13:57, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Max Demian wrote: On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. That's mostly down to the second law of thermodynamics. Efficiency = (input temp - output temp)/(input temp) for a heat engine. A gas power station is 30-50% efficient, the rest being waste heat unless you can use it for something like district heating. If that is the case, burning it directly to heat our homes etc makes more sense. It always is unless a zero carbon way of generating electricity is used. -- Max Demian |
#20
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On 19/05/2021 23:16, Max Demian wrote:
On 19/05/2021 13:57, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* Max Demian wrote: On 18/05/2021 13:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* tim... wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free It can make sense to reduce local pollution. until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft What is daft is charging a higher price per kilowatt of electricity than gas. That's mostly down to the second law of thermodynamics. Efficiency = (input temp - output temp)/(input temp) for a heat engine. A gas power station is 30-50% efficient, the rest being waste heat unless you can use it for something like district heating. If that is the case, burning it directly to heat our homes etc makes more sense. It always is unless a zero carbon way of generating electricity is used. The problem with wrong assumptions is that they lead to wrong answers 1. A gas power station is in the range of 40-70% efficient 2. Not all the heat from a heat pump comes from the electricity. A lot of it comes from the air or soil outside 3. Not all the heat from a central heating boiler goes into the hot water. Some goes out of the flue as hot gasses at slightly below 100C. In reality a CCGT and a CH condensing boiler are both about 65% (thermal) efficiency : the kicker is that heat pump is, in terms of heat out to electricity in, at least 200%, and up to 400% 'efficient'. That means that overall CCGT plus heat pump is a less energy intensive heating solution than a gas boiler. making your statement plain wrong -- If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State. Joseph Goebbels |
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The Natural Philosopher wrote:
In reality a CCGT and a CH condensing boiler are both about 65% (thermal) efficiency : the kicker is that heat pump is, in terms of heat out to electricity in, at least 200%, and up to 400% 'efficient'. That means that overall CCGT plus heat pump is a less energy intensive heating solution than a gas boiler. How does that compare to a gas powered domestic heat pump? Presumably that would out-perform CCGT + electric heat pump? Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#22
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On 20/05/2021 16:05, Tim+ wrote:
The Natural Philosopher wrote: In reality a CCGT and a CH condensing boiler are both about 65% (thermal) efficiency : the kicker is that heat pump is, in terms of heat out to electricity in, at least 200%, and up to 400% 'efficient'. That means that overall CCGT plus heat pump is a less energy intensive heating solution than a gas boiler. How does that compare to a gas powered domestic heat pump? Presumably that would out-perform CCGT + electric heat pump? Tim I would not have thought so. Otherwise we would all be using gas fridges, not electric -- No Apple devices were knowingly used in the preparation of this post. |
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On 20/05/2021 17:33, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 20/05/2021 16:05, Tim+ wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: In reality a CCGT and a CH condensingÂ* boiler are both about 65% (thermal) efficiency : the kicker is that heat pump is, in terms of heat out to electricity in, at least 200%, and up to 400% 'efficient'. That means that overall CCGT plus heat pump is a less energy intensive heating solution than a gas boiler. How does that compare to a gas powered domestic heat pump?Â* Presumably that would out-perform CCGT + electric heat pump? Tim I would not have thought so. Otherwise we would all be using gas fridges, not electric We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. When the CEGB was privatised, one of the managers was going to use his redundancy payout to try to adapt lorry turbocharger technology to make a "home" system to generate domestic electricity and use the waste heat for DHW and central heating. I helped him to scrounge some laboratory C&I stuff that was otherwise going into a skip for him to start making prototypes. I guess it never got anywhere, but I was always slightly sorry about that. It seemed to me to be a scheme with potential (although probably better in colder climates with a more consistent CH requirement). |
#24
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On 20/05/2021 22:32, newshound wrote:
On 20/05/2021 17:33, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 20/05/2021 16:05, Tim+ wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: In reality a CCGT and a CH condensingÂ* boiler are both about 65% (thermal) efficiency : the kicker is that heat pump is, in terms of heat out to electricity in, at least 200%, and up to 400% 'efficient'. That means that overall CCGT plus heat pump is a less energy intensive heating solution than a gas boiler. How does that compare to a gas powered domestic heat pump? Presumably that would out-perform CCGT + electric heat pump? Tim I would not have thought so. Otherwise we would all be using gas fridges, not electric We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. When the CEGB was privatised, one of the managers was going to use his redundancy payout to try to adapt lorry turbocharger technology to make a "home" system to generate domestic electricity and use the waste heat for DHW and central heating. I helped him to scrounge some laboratory C&I stuff that was otherwise going into a skip for him to start making prototypes. I guess it never got anywhere, but I was always slightly sorry about that. It seemed to me to be a scheme with potential (although probably better in colder climates with a more consistent CH requirement). One of the problems with model plane gas turbines (jets) is that the blade to cowl clearance has to be about the same as it is on a full size jet, but proportionately this is a far larger percentage of the total blade diameter, and this leads to serious loss of efficiency. Pocket size gas turbines simply are not as good as big ones. Small may be beautiful, but big is often better. Remember that having ones own generator stopped being useful about the time the last windmill stopped turning. Before modern insanity set in -- There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact. Mark Twain |
#25
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newshound wrote:
We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. And the primary advantage of electric heat pumps is you can run them off renewables, which you couldn't do with a gas heat pump. When the CEGB was privatised, one of the managers was going to use his redundancy payout to try to adapt lorry turbocharger technology to make a "home" system to generate domestic electricity and use the waste heat for DHW and central heating. I helped him to scrounge some laboratory C&I stuff that was otherwise going into a skip for him to start making prototypes. I guess it never got anywhere, but I was always slightly sorry about that. It seemed to me to be a scheme with potential (although probably better in colder climates with a more consistent CH requirement). 'Combined Heat and Power' is a thing you can buy today: https://www.thegreenage.co.uk/tech/chp-boilers/ The problem is generally modulating down - they really want to be run full blast, but that generates too much heat for a domestic setting. Even in cold climates, you would be much better off insulating. They might be fine for something like a swimming pool where there's a constant predictable heat demand. Theo |
#26
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In article , Theo
wrote: newshound wrote: We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. And the primary advantage of electric heat pumps is you can run them off renewables, which you couldn't do with a gas heat pump. When the CEGB was privatised, one of the managers was going to use his redundancy payout to try to adapt lorry turbocharger technology to make a "home" system to generate domestic electricity and use the waste heat for DHW and central heating. I helped him to scrounge some laboratory C&I stuff that was otherwise going into a skip for him to start making prototypes. I guess it never got anywhere, but I was always slightly sorry about that. It seemed to me to be a scheme with potential (although probably better in colder climates with a more consistent CH requirement). 'Combined Heat and Power' is a thing you can buy today: https://www.thegreenage.co.uk/tech/chp-boilers/ The problem is generally modulating down - they really want to be run full blast, but that generates too much heat for a domestic setting. Even in cold climates, you would be much better off insulating. They might be fine for something like a swimming pool where there's a constant predictable heat demand. In its 1920s Portobello power station, Edinburgh used the waste heat to warm up the sea water for the neighbouring open air swimming pool. Now both have gone. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#27
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On 21/05/2021 14:17, Theo wrote:
newshound wrote: We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. And the primary advantage of electric heat pumps is you can run them off renewables, which you couldn't do with a gas heat pump. That is not an advantage Everyone knows that the last thing we want in the world is unsustainable 'renewables'. -- "Corbyn talks about equality, justice, opportunity, health care, peace, community, compassion, investment, security, housing...." "What kind of person is not interested in those things?" "Jeremy Corbyn?" |
#28
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On 21/05/2021 14:39, charles wrote:
In article , Theo wrote: newshound wrote: We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. And the primary advantage of electric heat pumps is you can run them off renewables, which you couldn't do with a gas heat pump. When the CEGB was privatised, one of the managers was going to use his redundancy payout to try to adapt lorry turbocharger technology to make a "home" system to generate domestic electricity and use the waste heat for DHW and central heating. I helped him to scrounge some laboratory C&I stuff that was otherwise going into a skip for him to start making prototypes. I guess it never got anywhere, but I was always slightly sorry about that. It seemed to me to be a scheme with potential (although probably better in colder climates with a more consistent CH requirement). 'Combined Heat and Power' is a thing you can buy today: https://www.thegreenage.co.uk/tech/chp-boilers/ The problem is generally modulating down - they really want to be run full blast, but that generates too much heat for a domestic setting. Even in cold climates, you would be much better off insulating. They might be fine for something like a swimming pool where there's a constant predictable heat demand. In its 1920s Portobello power station, Edinburgh used the waste heat to warm up the sea water for the neighbouring open air swimming pool. Now both have gone. Battersea power station ran its final condensate out to blocks of flats...its the ideal location for a nuclear power station...rub londoners noses in the fact that someone somewhere has to live next door to a power station -- "Corbyn talks about equality, justice, opportunity, health care, peace, community, compassion, investment, security, housing...." "What kind of person is not interested in those things?" "Jeremy Corbyn?" |
#29
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In article ,
charles wrote: In its 1920s Portobello power station, Edinburgh used the waste heat to warm up the sea water for the neighbouring open air swimming pool. Now both have gone. Didn't Battersea Power Station do the same for nearby housing estates? -- *Any connection between your reality and mine is purely coincidental Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#30
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Theo wrote:
newshound wrote: We don't use gas fridges because we don't (yet) have mini gas turbines to drive the compressor. The old fashioned gas fridges were the "absorption" type, much less efficient than modern ones. And the primary advantage of electric heat pumps is you can run them off renewables, which you couldn't do with a gas heat pump. Very true, but whats the cut off date for domestic gas supplies? Cant say Ive ever heard one discussed. So, *if* domestic gas supplies continue, the *cheapest* domestic heating could be a gas powered heat pump depending on their efficiency and gas prices. Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#31
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On Wed, 19 May 2021 08:17:59 +0100, "tim..."
wrote: "Scott" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 18 May 2021 11:34:53 +0100, "tim..." wrote: "Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message ... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-57149059 yup banning gas boilers only makes any sense when 100% of UK electricity production is carbon free until it is, simply transferring gas use to additional electric use is just daft Not following your line of thought here. AIUI gas boilers are 100% gas and electricity generation is far less than 100% gas - and declining.. Gas isn't the worst non-renewable So, It isn't just the amount of electricity that's produced by gas that's important, it's the amount that produced by anything that isn't renewable. How much gas is produced by non-renewables and is this reducing over time? and whilst the amount of the current electricity demand is moving to renewable, where's the supply for the 100% increase [1] in amount needed when everybody move from gas to electric, going to come from? It won't all be coming from gas. [1] I use approx the same number of kWh of gas per year, space and water heating, as I do electric on everything else. And I have a *very* well insulated house. |
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On 18/05/2021 17:45, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
As I said in another thread, it won't happen, at least not at much of a speed as everyone will get their boilers fitted before hand and its going to be theier slow demise that they hope will allow time to ramp up generation, but Unless they use portable nuclear I cannot see how, Turn the English channel into a tidal power station perhaps? grin. Brian The basic problem, on top of the intermittency, is that tidal power requires robust infrastructure to cope with weather extremes, so the capital cost is high. A Severn Barrage would be rather like the Channel Tunnel, not cost effective as a project but once built a great asset because you could run a motorway and/or railway across it. Also, while it would be great for sailors and other aquatic leisure activities, it's not so good for Slimbrige and the birders. |
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On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
[ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. |
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On 24/05/2021 17:49, JNugent wrote:
On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. I have thought it very odd that asthma rates have been rising, while vehicle emission controls have been improving and and all forms of vehicle pollution have actually been falling significantly, yet the action seems to be to pillory the motorist, restrict when and where they can drive and charge them punitive penalties for entering certain areas. |
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JNugent wrote:
We all managed to survive. Of course, if anyone had actually died, they'd be sure to post here and let us know they disagreed. #Paul |
#36
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In article ,
JNugent wrote: On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. The human body can be damaged long term by some types of pollution, but still 'survive'. And not all will be equally effected. Lead was a prime example. It's similar to Covid. 'I've not caught it, therefore all these precautions are stupid, and disrupt my life' -- *Pentium wise, pen and paper foolish * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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On Tue, 25 May 2021 10:41:07 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , JNugent wrote: On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. The human body can be damaged long term by some types of pollution, but still 'survive'. And not all will be equally effected. Lead was a prime example. It's similar to Covid. 'I've not caught it, therefore all these precautions are stupid, and disrupt my life' Especially some immigrants who may come from a relatively simple life style and with genes not adapted to cope with the environment they find themselves in. |
#38
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On 24/05/2021 19:23, Steve Walker wrote:
On 24/05/2021 17:49, JNugent wrote: On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. I have thought it very odd that asthma rates have been rising, While it's anecdotal evidence, I have known a few friends who gave up smoking to then suffer from asthma. In one case their doctor said it's no an unusual consequence. while vehicle emission controls have been improving and and all forms of vehicle pollution have actually been falling significantly, yet the action seems to be to pillory the motorist, restrict when and where they can drive and charge them punitive penalties for entering certain areas. An interesting observation. |
#39
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On 24/05/2021 19:23, Steve Walker wrote:
On 24/05/2021 17:49, JNugent wrote: On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. I have thought it very odd that asthma rates have been rising, while vehicle emission controls have been improving and and all forms of vehicle pollution have actually been falling significantly, yet the action seems to be to pillory the motorist, restrict when and where they can drive and charge them punitive penalties for entering certain areas. You only need to walk along the side of a busy road to notice the pong on NO2. This wasn't the case 20 years ago. Now There are 10+ million diesel engined cars on the road and the vast majority are not EU6 compliant. There needs a massive cull of older diesel clunkers. |
#40
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On 25/05/2021 10:41, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , JNugent wrote: On 19/05/2021 01:55 pm, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: [ ... ] When the coroner in London ruled that the little girl who died a few months ago was due to pollution, there was quite a local fuss. Of course transport got the blame since she lived close to a busy main road, but several different types of sources will have contributed to that pollution. And unless lots of other people in the location where that unfortunate girl lived are dropping like flies, falling victim to (only) the self-same "pollution", then it was probably not the pollution which killed her, though it might (or might not) have exacerbated whatever it was. For a time when I was a boy, we used to live directly on the A59 in central Liverpool, less than a hundred and fifty yards from the Mersey Tunnel entrance. There were almost no emission controls in those days, and as well as traffic (lots of it), we were surrounded by dwellings burning coal in grates and various industrial premises, including a nearby brewery, all doing the same. We all managed to survive. The human body can be damaged long term by some types of pollution, but still 'survive'. And not all will be equally effected. Lead was a prime example. It's similar to Covid. 'I've not caught it, therefore all these precautions are stupid, and disrupt my life' How do you know you didn't 'catch it' ?. Lots of people get no symptoms and not just young people. |
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