It’s that time of year when the boiler is again starting to grown into life and warm the homestead which has led to considering how to ensure my boiler is working as efficiently as possible. So here’s the dilemma and my question:
Most home boilers are over specified and therefore too large for the property. To get the condensing boiler to work efficiently I need the return flow to be as low temperature as possible. I have thermostats in every room to switch the heating on and off, (it’s under floor heating throughout) so what I’m noticing is that although the heating is always enabled to allow it to switch on, ie the house is set to a constant temperature, the heating of each room is sporadic. So, usually only one room needs a burst of heat every now and again. As it drops colder the frequency just increases. Now, the return flow temperature I can achieve with the heating this way is too high, resulting in the boiler not operating efficiently in the condensing mode. The boiler is too large for the amount of heat that is required to heat just an odd room.
What I’m wondering is whether it’s better to go open flow circuit everywhere, so that when any room needs a burst of heat, all rooms receive heat. This way the boiler is operating efficiently ie in condensing mode, however, I’m not sure how to determine apart from doing it whether this is more efficient than running the boiler inefficiently heating up less water.
In my last house, which had radiators I switched that to run so that the house maintained a constant temperature and opened up all the TRV’s. I’m not sure what had the best effect, but I cut my heating costs down by a third and had a much warmer house as a consequence. It was however an old building, solid wall, that tried to dump as much heat into the atmosphere as possible…..it could be that by doing it I kept the walls drier and created better insulation as a consequence. My new house is very different and well insulated.
Most home boilers are over specified and therefore too large for the property. To get the condensing boiler to work efficiently I need the return flow to be as low temperature as possible. I have thermostats in every room to switch the heating on and off, (it’s under floor heating throughout) so what I’m noticing is that although the heating is always enabled to allow it to switch on, ie the house is set to a constant temperature, the heating of each room is sporadic. So, usually only one room needs a burst of heat every now and again. As it drops colder the frequency just increases. Now, the return flow temperature I can achieve with the heating this way is too high, resulting in the boiler not operating efficiently in the condensing mode. The boiler is too large for the amount of heat that is required to heat just an odd room.
What I’m wondering is whether it’s better to go open flow circuit everywhere, so that when any room needs a burst of heat, all rooms receive heat. This way the boiler is operating efficiently ie in condensing mode, however, I’m not sure how to determine apart from doing it whether this is more efficient than running the boiler inefficiently heating up less water.
In my last house, which had radiators I switched that to run so that the house maintained a constant temperature and opened up all the TRV’s. I’m not sure what had the best effect, but I cut my heating costs down by a third and had a much warmer house as a consequence. It was however an old building, solid wall, that tried to dump as much heat into the atmosphere as possible…..it could be that by doing it I kept the walls drier and created better insulation as a consequence. My new house is very different and well insulated.