Just took our first loaf out of the Ninja tastes fantastic and quick to make and we know what went into it Lovely Jubbly
With no ventilation you'd soon reduce the air quality in the space with detrimental effects on the occupants. Natural ventilation would meet the requirements.yes a very rambling and inconclusive article!
Anyway- as (or if..) we go greener presumably gas will be priced out and electricity will be the future.
One big plus of electric is no need for ventilation and no condensation. Extractor fan can be recirculating and no heat lost. Have discovered that you don't need to buy new filters - they are washable in sugar soap.
We have security shutters which are made of aluminium sandwiched around foam insulation board. They seriously reduce sound and heat loss, are pretty much light proof and lower our insurance premiums.I'm just getting all my wood together to make external window shutters. This is for a couple of reasons namely - Keeping heat in in the winter, keeping the heat out in the summer, keeping the light out (have a street lamp over the road so need blackout curtains at the moment), reducing sound (not that important but a potential bonus). I am predicting they will come back into fashion in the coming years.
As for in the house, what a lot of people seem to forget is that as long as the heat isn't leaving the house e.g. a condensing tumble drier then it is pretty much 100% efficient, same with lightbulbs. Also the turning off of a 5w LED bulb is pretty much negligable as you could leave it on for 200hours and it would cost you 1 unit ~35p. Which makes no sense why they keep putting stories about people having to use candles for light. Candles are significantly more epensive than running an LED and likely to burn your house down.
That is true but it is rarely taken into account when people quote prices to run things e.gYes, but that only makes sense if you heat your house with resistive electric heating. Efficiency and cost are not the same thing.
We have security shutters which are made of aluminium sandwiched around foam insulation board. They seriously reduce sound and heat loss, are pretty much light proof and lower our insurance premiums.
I meant no cooker hood blowing hot air straight outside. Instead it it filters it and catches fat on the first grills, and more through the carbon filters and passes the warm air back into the room.With no ventilation you'd soon reduce the air quality in the space with detrimental effects on the occupants. Natural ventilation would meet the requirements.
If you are boiling water you still need extractive ventilation.yes a very rambling and inconclusive article!
Anyway- as (or if..) we go greener presumably gas will be priced out and electricity will be the future.
One big plus of electric is no need for ventilation and no condensation. Extractor fan can be recirculating and no heat lost. Have discovered that you don't need to buy new filters - they are washable in sugar soap.
Only if you forget to turn the kettle off.If you are boiling water you still need extractive ventilation.
sound worryingly like the construction of the Grenfell cladding.We have security shutters which are made of aluminium sandwiched around foam insulation board. They seriously reduce sound and heat loss, are pretty much light proof and lower our insurance premiums.
Plenty of places were it isn't an issue. Grenfell, sadly, was a bad use of it.sound worryingly like the construction of the Grenfell cladding.
I've just ordered one of these on the pretense to do exactly that. If I'm honest, I just wanted a new toy but let's gloss over that!Went round the house the other evening with a thermal camera - found quite a few cold spots (some known and a few unknown previously). Definitely worth doing if you can get your hands on one.
I've just ordered one of these on the pretense to do exactly that. If I'm honest, I just wanted a new toy but let's gloss over that!
Where were the areas that surprised you? It may be useful to others who don't have access to a thermal camera if we can provide a list of the main offenders.
Took a look at my energy bill for the first, it’s in the wife’s name so I never see it. I was pleasantly surprised to discover the recent changes we have made have had a significant reduction in our energy usage.
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Turned the heating down to 18°, started using a Ninja, changed a couple of high use light fittings to led. Unfortunately it doesn’t represent any where near the same financial saving.
It does beg the question what the hell were we doing last year.?
Actual savings from perhaps not putting the heating on as much - otherwise none.We are on a smart meter and it claims to be based on “actual readings”. Is any one else seeing similar savings on their bills?
Bought a house off someone who had done just that - most frightening electrical work I have ever seen, far worse than "professional" electricians - no offense meant to true professionals, I'm sure you still exist just wish I could find you.Bypass the Meter
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