robotmannick
Member
Hi all,
I was hoping to canvas your opinions on what kind of heating system I should install in my house.
I currently have a 40kW biomass boiler which provides all heating and hot water for a 6-bedroom 220m2 house. Happy to elaborate on the biomass boiler if anyone is interested, but the short version was that it made financial sense whilst I was receiving the RHI, but came at the cost of a lot of work and not insignificant inconvenience in terms of forward planning of when to light it etc. Now that the RHI payments have finished, I'm wondering what system would be best for the future. Thoughts so far:
1) Keep the biomass boiler. No installation cost, but the cost of logs, combined with the physical work (and time) required to manage log stores and feed the boiler, not to mention the inconvenience makes this somewhat unappealing.
2) Replace with an oil boiler. Seems like a backwards step - that's what I removed when I installed the biomass boiler. I have an oil tank which I believe to be sound - there is still 100-200 litres of oil in the tank, but given that it's been there for 8ish years, can (should?) I use it with a new boiler? If not, I'll have to arrange for draining of the tank and disposal of the oil. If I'm doing that, maybe I should also replace the tank too as I have no idea what contaminants have collected in there over the years. Probably the cheapest option in terms of installation, albeit not the cheapest to run and and not very green.
3) Replace with an LPG boiler. I'm not overly keen with having a large LPG tank in the garden - I know it's perfectly safe, but I saw a video at work of a BLEV explosion and is scared the bejesus out of me. However, also a relatively cheap option to install, but similarly not very eco-friendly, nor the cheapest to run.
4) Solar thermal. I don't have much South-facing roof space and even if I did, I'd need a pretty large (expensive) collector to heat the whole house. Cheap to run and good eco-credentials though.
5) Air source heat pump. I reckon on spending maybe £15k on this option plus BoJo's £5k grant. I don't have underfloor heating though, so would be reliant on existing radiators. Retrofitting underfloor heating isn't unfeasible as I am renovating parts of the house, but I can see the costs spiralling.
6) Ground source heat pump. I have a garden about the size of a tennis court so could potentially dig trenches for the pipework. Access is limited to about a 1.5m width, so boreholes would require removing a hedge in the back garden and reinstating (not averse to this as there's a prickly one that I'd like to get shot of anyway). I'd guess we're talking £30-£40k though for this option. Maybe the cheapest and greenest option in terms of running cost?
Of course, there may be a combination solution...I have a 3000 litre thermal buffer as part of the current installation. For instance, I can add solar thermal to feed into this which would probably do me during the summer months, then keep the biomass boiler for topping up during the winter.
So then learned folks: what are your thoughts? What would you do and why?
I was hoping to canvas your opinions on what kind of heating system I should install in my house.
I currently have a 40kW biomass boiler which provides all heating and hot water for a 6-bedroom 220m2 house. Happy to elaborate on the biomass boiler if anyone is interested, but the short version was that it made financial sense whilst I was receiving the RHI, but came at the cost of a lot of work and not insignificant inconvenience in terms of forward planning of when to light it etc. Now that the RHI payments have finished, I'm wondering what system would be best for the future. Thoughts so far:
1) Keep the biomass boiler. No installation cost, but the cost of logs, combined with the physical work (and time) required to manage log stores and feed the boiler, not to mention the inconvenience makes this somewhat unappealing.
2) Replace with an oil boiler. Seems like a backwards step - that's what I removed when I installed the biomass boiler. I have an oil tank which I believe to be sound - there is still 100-200 litres of oil in the tank, but given that it's been there for 8ish years, can (should?) I use it with a new boiler? If not, I'll have to arrange for draining of the tank and disposal of the oil. If I'm doing that, maybe I should also replace the tank too as I have no idea what contaminants have collected in there over the years. Probably the cheapest option in terms of installation, albeit not the cheapest to run and and not very green.
3) Replace with an LPG boiler. I'm not overly keen with having a large LPG tank in the garden - I know it's perfectly safe, but I saw a video at work of a BLEV explosion and is scared the bejesus out of me. However, also a relatively cheap option to install, but similarly not very eco-friendly, nor the cheapest to run.
4) Solar thermal. I don't have much South-facing roof space and even if I did, I'd need a pretty large (expensive) collector to heat the whole house. Cheap to run and good eco-credentials though.
5) Air source heat pump. I reckon on spending maybe £15k on this option plus BoJo's £5k grant. I don't have underfloor heating though, so would be reliant on existing radiators. Retrofitting underfloor heating isn't unfeasible as I am renovating parts of the house, but I can see the costs spiralling.
6) Ground source heat pump. I have a garden about the size of a tennis court so could potentially dig trenches for the pipework. Access is limited to about a 1.5m width, so boreholes would require removing a hedge in the back garden and reinstating (not averse to this as there's a prickly one that I'd like to get shot of anyway). I'd guess we're talking £30-£40k though for this option. Maybe the cheapest and greenest option in terms of running cost?
Of course, there may be a combination solution...I have a 3000 litre thermal buffer as part of the current installation. For instance, I can add solar thermal to feed into this which would probably do me during the summer months, then keep the biomass boiler for topping up during the winter.
So then learned folks: what are your thoughts? What would you do and why?