Dave - with regard to your system, can you please supply a link to a webpage about compensated flow circuits? Accept all you say about cycling. My boiler is oversized for the house now it is better insulated, and cycles even during DHW production. Could do with reducing the gas rate, but local RGIs don't seem interested. I actually do not know a good gas installer locally. I know a good one in Kent, but even if he were to visit, he would be inclined to condemn the boiler on the slightest pretext, basically because he seems to take the opposite attitude to you!
My house is 1870s, and loft only has between 4" plus carpet on loft floor to 15" of fibreglass. Because of its age, it has to be measured in inches 🙂 . Beyond this, the calculated heat losses don't change very much, so I'm happy with that. Ground floor is mostly 2" of cellotex under boards (old section) or 5" Warmcel under boards (refurbished section), with similar U value. The small kitchen is uninsulated concrete.
Small sections of brick/block cavity walls have sloppy construction with mortar on ties and have had rising damp issues due to rubble in cavity (now removed, but there may be more that will fall down and create a further nuisance) so not inclined to insulate. Solid walls could be insulated to some degree. Biggest problems are shoddy construction of timber-framed elements leading to bypassing of insulation, and draughts which really necessitates removal of internal plasterboard and a partial rebuild.
The next step, however, is to box in the stairs thus ensuring that any heat downstairs stays downstairs, making the ground floor cosy.
Am considering a woodburner and, if so will go for thermal store to integrate backboiler, gas, and possible solar thermal on the basis that a modern insulated thermal store should lose minimal heat and cycling would be eliminated.
Any thoughts?
My house is 1870s, and loft only has between 4" plus carpet on loft floor to 15" of fibreglass. Because of its age, it has to be measured in inches 🙂 . Beyond this, the calculated heat losses don't change very much, so I'm happy with that. Ground floor is mostly 2" of cellotex under boards (old section) or 5" Warmcel under boards (refurbished section), with similar U value. The small kitchen is uninsulated concrete.
Small sections of brick/block cavity walls have sloppy construction with mortar on ties and have had rising damp issues due to rubble in cavity (now removed, but there may be more that will fall down and create a further nuisance) so not inclined to insulate. Solid walls could be insulated to some degree. Biggest problems are shoddy construction of timber-framed elements leading to bypassing of insulation, and draughts which really necessitates removal of internal plasterboard and a partial rebuild.
The next step, however, is to box in the stairs thus ensuring that any heat downstairs stays downstairs, making the ground floor cosy.
Am considering a woodburner and, if so will go for thermal store to integrate backboiler, gas, and possible solar thermal on the basis that a modern insulated thermal store should lose minimal heat and cycling would be eliminated.
Any thoughts?