![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#21
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article , Brian Gaff wrote:
I personally think we should ban conferences, as they waste a heck of a lot of power. Brian But isn't that compensated by the amount of hot air they generate? Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
Agamemnon wrote:
"Simon Slavin" wrote in message ... I've been taking part in a conference on power use, and between sessionssome of us worked out something of interest. You will find and read stories of very cheap TVs being sold in the UK from about a month ago. These are not old models, nor are they broken, nor reconditioned. There's nothing wrong with them. So why are they cheap ? Answer: they use a hell of a lot of power. We looked up the manuals for several models which were cheap in the local shops (standard TV suppliers like Euronics, Comet, Dixons). All the models we found unusually cheap were large power-users. Several other models which hadn't been discounted weren't. We didn't conduct a statistically sound test, just looked up various models we could find the manuals of easily, but what we did findgave a clear pattern. So you get your TV cheap and pay more to run it. I hope this warning saves someone some money in the long term. Read the power-usage figure before buying. And if I can't have a cheep power hungry TV heating up the room then I will have to pay more for the central hearting. Bloody environmentalist morons. It's bad enough they had to phase out 100W light bulbs. How am I supposed to stay warm while reading in bed? Don't these idiots ever think. How much energy and damage to the atmosphere do those useless florescent energy efficient light bulbs cost to manufacture compared to cheep 100W ones. If the heat for the house doesn't come from them then something else will have to provide it, so you are no better off switching to them and neither is the planet. In some situations this type of reasoning has a small element of truth. However, jsut becasuse tv a uses more power than TV B, does not mean that the differece between them is given off as heat. In fact that sort of reasoning of really very poor and does not apply to electronics design. cheers David |
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
|
"DM" wrote in message . uk... Agamemnon wrote: "Simon Slavin" wrote in message ... I've been taking part in a conference on power use, and between sessionssome of us worked out something of interest. You will find and read stories of very cheap TVs being sold in the UK from about a month ago. These are not old models, nor are they broken, nor reconditioned. There's nothing wrong with them. So why are they cheap ? Answer: they use a hell of a lot of power. We looked up the manuals for several models which were cheap in the local shops (standard TV suppliers like Euronics, Comet, Dixons). All the models we found unusually cheap were large power-users. Several other models which hadn't been discounted weren't. We didn't conduct a statistically sound test, just looked up various models we could find the manuals of easily, but what we did findgave a clear pattern. So you get your TV cheap and pay more to run it. I hope this warning saves someone some money in the long term. Read the power-usage figure before buying. And if I can't have a cheep power hungry TV heating up the room then I will have to pay more for the central hearting. Bloody environmentalist morons. It's bad enough they had to phase out 100W light bulbs. How am I supposed to stay warm while reading in bed? Don't these idiots ever think. How much energy and damage to the atmosphere do those useless florescent energy efficient light bulbs cost to manufacture compared to cheep 100W ones. If the heat for the house doesn't come from them then something else will have to provide it, so you are no better off switching to them and neither is the planet. In some situations this type of reasoning has a small element of truth. However, jsut becasuse tv a uses more power than TV B, does not mean that the differece between them is given off as heat. In fact that sort of reasoning of really very poor and does not apply to electronics design. cheers David surely all the input comes out as heat somewhere (including light)? |
|
#24
|
|||
|
|||
|
DM wrote:
In some situations this type of reasoning has a small element of truth. However, jsut becasuse tv a uses more power than TV B, does not mean that the differece between them is given off as heat. In fact that sort of reasoning of really very poor and does not apply to electronics design. So perhaps you could tell us what else it comes out as and some idea of what proportion doesn't come out as heat? -- |
|
#25
|
|||
|
|||
|
It's bad enough they had to phase out 100W light bulbs. How am I supposed to stay warm while reading in bed? Don't these idiots ever think. How much energy and damage to the atmosphere do those useless florescent energy efficient light bulbs cost to manufacture compared to cheep 100W ones. If the heat for the house doesn't come from them then something else will have to provide it, so you are no better off switching to them and neither is the planet. Indeed. I haven't used central heating for years. I keep a 100 watt lamp running in every room, and the wife, the kids and I have a stepladder each. We climb up and warm ourselves in the heated area 1 foot below the ceiling. My gas bills have plummeted :-) In reality, I haven't bought a 100 watt light bulb for at least 5 years. I have one in a seldom used light but every other light and lamp is either fitted with halogen capsules, recessed halogens or CFL's. I've got a few 100 watt lamps in a box in the garage, should I put them on Ebay or offer them to Daily Mail readers? I was given a variety wattage box of Philips Genie CFLs, which I find excellent. Some of the CFLs are horrible, but these warm up very quickly and offer a good amount of light with a more natural colour than some of the others. Robert Dyas currently selling all wattages at 5 for £2.50. |
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
DM wrote: However, jsut becasuse tv a uses more power than TV B, does not mean that the differece between them is given off as heat. Yes it does. All the energy used by a television ends up as heat. Light reflects around a bit and is then absorbed, heating up whatever absorbs it. The same goes for sound. In fact that sort of reasoning of really very poor and does not apply to electronics design. So what's your theory? Where do you think the power goes? -- Richard -- Please remember to mention me / in tapes you leave behind. |
|
#27
|
|||
|
|||
|
Bob Latham wrote:
What I would love to know is what is the real world improvement of a condensing boiler over just a new boiler without changing the radiators. It's significant, for example see http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk....n&dmode=source and many other threads in the archives of uk.d-i-y. NB the diagram I referred to in the above-mentioned post has moved to http://www.maxwell.myzen.co.uk/uk.d-i-y/AM3_fig2.6.gif Oh, and I think these boilers have to have fans in the flue because you can no longer rely on hot air rising to remove the fumes. All boilers with any pretence of high efficiency use fanned flues to control the aspiration rate and keep excess air flow to a minimum. Otherwise the energy lost in heating atmospheric nitrogen which is just discharged through the flue would detract significantly from the efficiency. Also a fan can stop when the boiler is not firing, reducing air flow and thus heat lost from the circulating water to the flue by reverse action of the heat exchanger. -- Andy |
|
#28
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Bob Latham" wrote in message ... In article , Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Brian Gaff wrote: Many modern boilers have very cool flues I notice. Thus one assumes they must capture the heat somehow internally. Commonly called condensing boilers. Identifiable by the plume of water vapour from the flue on cold days. For others, obviously. ;-) From what I understand and I'm not an expert, there is a problem with condensing boilers though. It seems that they use two heat exchangers, the second of which works in the normal way. The first one however is used to heat the returning (coldest) water before it enters the main part of the boiler. The condensing action recovers heat (latent) that is used to change a liquid into a gas and hence returns *mostly* steam into water. The problem though is that this only happens whilst the returning water is cold enough. When the water warms up, the first heat exchanger is too hot to condense the steam in the flue and the condensing action stops as does a lot of the heat recovery. That would explain why the new condensing boiler that was installed in my house is more noisy than the old boiler it replaced and provides less heat than it's predecessors while using about the same amount of gas. To improve the situation, some people seem to advocate fitting over sized radiators in every room, the idea being to get the returning water temperature lower so as to maintain condensing action longer. Which of course would waste the energy unnecessarily and therefore pollute the environment more than a conventional boiler. What I would love to know is what is the real world improvement of a condensing boiler over just a new boiler without changing the radiators. There isn't. They are actually worse. The old boiler lasted 25 years and provided more heart than the new condensing boiler does, and hardly made any noise compared to the new one. Oh, and I think these boilers have to have fans in the flue because you can no longer rely on hot air rising to remove the fumes. Ah, that explains all the bloody noise. Bob. |
|
#29
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Bob Latham wrote: In article , Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Brian Gaff wrote: Many modern boilers have very cool flues I notice. Thus one assumes they must capture the heat somehow internally. Commonly called condensing boilers. Identifiable by the plume of water vapour from the flue on cold days. For others, obviously. ;-) From what I understand and I'm not an expert, there is a problem with condensing boilers though. It seems that they use two heat exchangers, the second of which works in the normal way. The first one however is used to heat the returning (coldest) water before it enters the main part of the boiler. Older designs - which were actually modifications from non condensing - could but newer ones have a purpose built heat exchanger. Although the principle is the same. The condensing action recovers heat (latent) that is used to change a liquid into a gas and hence returns *mostly* steam into water. The problem though is that this only happens whilst the returning water is cold enough. When the water warms up, the first heat exchanger is too hot to condense the steam in the flue and the condensing action stops as does a lot of the heat recovery. A decent modern boiler will modulate the flame and pump speed to maintain the optimum. Right then, that would explain why my new condensing boiler is leaving the house colder than its predecessor. Presumably by turning up the radiators and the thermostat to compensate for this I am making the boiler less efficient than the one it replace. Totally useless. With mine this means slightly slower warm up times compared to the old non condensing boiler. Although I could over-ride this if needed to get faster warm up by allowing the boiler to go into non condensing mode. Is that automatic? To improve the situation, some people seem to advocate fitting over sized radiators in every room, the idea being to get the returning water temperature lower so as to maintain condensing action longer. Yes. If the system was undersized so the boiler can rarely get into condensing mode this is so. But most were designed to cope with temperatures well below the winter norm so can operate in condensing mode That's what they claim, but not the reality. But then again the last cold spell was back in the early 90s. for most of the time. Obviously changing otherwise ok rads for larger ones is expensive - so you'd need to work out if the investment was worth it in fuel savings. I did and it wasn't. What I would love to know is what is the real world improvement of a condensing boiler over just a new boiler without changing the radiators. Here somewhere over 20% in gas usage. Of course the rise in gas prices means I'm actually paying more than this time last year - I installed the new boiler last spring. The old boiler was a balanced flue type with pilot light mounted internally where the waste heat wasn't wasted - at least in the winter. With up to date controls - programmable thermostat for the main living area and TRVs elsewhere. The new boiler is weather compensated. But the hot water remains as was - a storage system. Oh, and I think these boilers have to have fans in the flue because you can no longer rely on hot air rising to remove the fumes. Fan assisted flues came in long before condensing boilers. They allow a longer flue than the older balanced flue terminals. |
|
#30
|
|||
|
|||
|
wrote in message ... And if I can't have a cheep power hungry TV heating up the room then I will have to pay more for the central hearting. Only when the weather is cold! On a hot summer night, you would have to put a fan on or turn the air conditioning system on to cool down this unwanted heat generated. On a hot summer night I would be going out. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| OEM TV remotes for sale cheap $2.50-$8 | Steve Kral | High definition TV | 1 | July 14th 08 11:24 PM |
| video supermarket !good quality and cheap price!brand new, and factory sale | [email protected] | UK digital tv | 0 | August 23rd 07 08:40 AM |
| * Warning * For anyone using Auction world Television * Warning * | Marky | UK sky | 16 | October 12th 04 06:01 PM |