D
dontknowitall
As I understand things where a new heating system is being installed in a domestic dwellings over there have to be at least two heating zones. These are usually living area and sleeping area or upstairs and downstairs.
Assuming I'm correct ...
Will this really save fuel or will it use more fuel?
My thinking is that heat rises so if you're not heating upstairs the heat from downstairs rises to the cooler temperature upstairs. This means some heat downstairs is being lost so you have to heat downstairs more and at a higher temperature to compensate for this heat loss.
Using this logic, if you heat the whole building then although you're heating upstairs when you might not be using that space at least you're not running the boiler for longer than necessary to warm downstairs.
One way round this could be to shut the bedroom and bathroom doors. But this doesn't stop the heat going up through the ceilings or up the stairs. So should you zone the landing radiator(s) with downstairs?
Additionally, the extra wiring and plumbing means more van trips for the installation, which costs the customer more and uses more fuel for the van. The extra wiring and pipework requires more raw materials to be mined from the planet.
So is it really that environmentally friendly?
Assuming I'm correct ...
Will this really save fuel or will it use more fuel?
My thinking is that heat rises so if you're not heating upstairs the heat from downstairs rises to the cooler temperature upstairs. This means some heat downstairs is being lost so you have to heat downstairs more and at a higher temperature to compensate for this heat loss.
Using this logic, if you heat the whole building then although you're heating upstairs when you might not be using that space at least you're not running the boiler for longer than necessary to warm downstairs.
One way round this could be to shut the bedroom and bathroom doors. But this doesn't stop the heat going up through the ceilings or up the stairs. So should you zone the landing radiator(s) with downstairs?
Additionally, the extra wiring and plumbing means more van trips for the installation, which costs the customer more and uses more fuel for the van. The extra wiring and pipework requires more raw materials to be mined from the planet.
So is it really that environmentally friendly?