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I have vents up high on the walls. There is no heat loss or drafts. Reconsider.
Lucky you..........ours produce howling gales in the rooms. I put covers with sliding grills on mine and close them when there is a breeze.
You must have a fixed vent in a room with a gas / oil burning appliance (unless it's fully separately vented and enclosed), or anything liable to produce substantial carbon monoxide - so presumably for any type of non-electric stove, and possibly for an open fire too.PAB - where did you manage to get the covers with the sliding grills ???? I need them badly before we are blown out of itI have this thing in my head that they changed building regs to ensure these vents were left open at all time and thought perhaps thats why they got rid of the covers with the sliding grills (??!!) - I could only find open covers when I went looking, would love to find the open/close covers!!!
You must have a fixed vent in a room with a gas / oil burning appliance (unless it's fully separately vented and enclosed), or anything liable to produce substantial carbon monoxide - so presumably for any type of non-electric stove, and possibly for an open fire too.
I think the sliding vents are okay in other rooms, and you can get those vent covers in plenty or normal home supplies and DIY outlets. We got some in either Atlantic or Homebase.
Any Body with and Ideas ????
HRV systems...
...
sfag is talking rubbish aircobra.
typical wall vents are designed to allow generally 4 air changes every hour.
so picture this, you have a room with a rad and an air vent.
the air is completely changed 4 times every hour in the room by the vent, therefore the radiator has to heat the whol eroom 4 times every hour. thats how it works.
with a heat recovery unit working at say, 75% efficiency, and assuming the same room... then....
the rad heats the room once, during the next hour the HRv system change sthe air 4 times, as like the passive vent, however, every time it changes the air it retains 75% of the heat of the room. therefore with HRV systems the room only needs to be heated once every hour instead of 4 times with a passive vent. thats the principle its based on and the reason they are relatively expensive pieces of machimnery (approx 5k for a standard house)
...Lets say the tempature drops outside to say 10 degress.
The tempature in my vented bedroom room will stay at 20 degrees - without heating - all night. ....
My house is a modern build.
I guess the heat rises a bit - but not much. The floors have insulation so not too much should get up. I
It has very large windows with light blinds - not condusive to keeping the heat in.
I guess the wife is hot. Have to say the kids give off a lot of heat too while they sleep.
Its a three storey house. The top floor is under used and does not have the heating on all. It stays at 18 - 19 degrees.
I consider that bloody cold but others on these boards switch their heat off when it hits 18 degrees.
And last but not least every room in the house has hole in the wall vents letting air in and out.
No vents on the south side = no draughts.
Hows that for a low tech solution.
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