Showing posts with label insulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insulation. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Sun power for eco-farm

At  Mur Crusto farm, we have completed the final part of the eco jigsaw: we have a photovoltaic system installed and up and running. After a glitch with the wiring, the very professional MGS got our system operational last week. Below are some photos of the installation. Click on them for full sized views:
 Above are the two arrays of nine Schuco panels on the roof. They are supported by a heavily-galvanised robust steel rail system and connected electrically in series so as to generate anything up to 600 volts DC on a good sunny day. The output power is connected to a massive box, the inverter (see below).
 The inverter and its associated safety switches mounted on the board below it, is really the 'brains' of the system, transforming a variable DC input into AC at the voltage and frequency required to feed it into the National Grid or to power appliances in the house. The small white box on the upper right of the board below the inverter records exactly how many kilowatt-hours of power are generated. Our electricity supply company Ecotricity needs to know the total in order to pay us for the power we have generated. With the new feed-in tariffs, this amounts to 41.3 pence per kilowatt-hour. The power is pumped into the Grid via an armoured underground cable which connects to the meter box of Gwyndy, our holiday cottage, which will now be rendered carbon-negative and so can be truly claimed (as we do!) to be an eco-cottage.
Above is one of the simple but rather clever displays on the inverter which tells us how much power is being generated. You can move backwards from Today to Yesterday to the Week or Month and see all the aggregated totals. These include the amount of money generated - always good to know! - and the number of kilograms of CO2 saved by this particular solar powered installation; the feel-good factor.

Are we now carbon-neutral? I don't know but we've
  1. insulated everything we can in Gwyndy and Mur Crusto farmhouse
  2. have one economical car
  3. installed wood-burning stoves for both buildings with all wood sourced from the farm
  4. built a solar heat collecting conservatory
  5. installed an energy-saving air source heat pump
  6. installed the PV system I've described in this post
I think that's about all we can do...


System details
  • maximum power the system can generate under ideal conditions - 3.78kWpeak 
  • expected generation per year - 2900kW
  • saving in CO2 over 1 year - 1.6 tonnes
  • system is based on 18  Schuco MPE 215 PS 05 polycrystalline, photovoltaic panels
    mounted on the south facing roof of the barn
  • the solar panels are covered by a 25 year manufacturer’s performance guarantee
  • total cost - 16,550 GB pounds
  • return on invested capital - 8.7 percent in first year rising incrementally to 15 percent in 25 years. Unlike the stock market, this investment payback is guaranteed and in any case generates far more than money held in a bank savings account
  • payback time about 10 years
  • annual income from sale of power generated - about 1,500 GB pounds

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Going down; going up!

Passive solar project continues...

Going down: At last, the digging out and barrowing on tons of boulders, stones and earth are over. The deepest part of all was the foundation for the 'dwarf' wall which will support the conservatory structure. Here (right), Val is checking the base level of the foundation trench with the water level (see previous post). Fortunately, because the ground is so hard and stony - thanks to glaciers 14,000 years ago - foundations can be minimal.


Going up: From this point on, it's up! First the foundations, then the base part of the dwarf wall which I've arranged so that the top of the blocks is exactly the same height as the finished floor level inside the structure. At least I hope I have. Val and I have treble checked levels, measurements and angles, all of which are made more complex by the front wall of the old farmhouse (to which the conservatory will attach) along which nothing is true; neither vertical nor plane.



Attention to insulation: The picture (above left) shows me, on a hot day wearing my sombrero, setting out the first double line of blocks. I'm using a sheet of Ecotherm insulation to ensure that the wall cavity is wide enough to hold these sheets when I build the rest of it. I intend to have 50mm of this high-quality insulation within the wall cavity and another 50mm attached to the inside and covered finally with plasterboard. I've found from my experience of building our holiday eco-cottage that insulation pays massive dividends. I shall also be insulating the floor. On the right (above), I'm pouring what seemed to be the thousandth barrowload of concrete - it's hard work! - to form the floor slab, 100mm thick. Underneath it is the black polythene damp proof membrane which we've lapped up the wall of the old house (which has neither foundations nor damp proof course) and over the first block of the dwarf wall. The damp course must always be above final outside ground level, of course.


Sub-floor complete! I finished pouring the final load of concrete just the day before it started to rain, the first rain for about 5 weeks. I'd worked 5 days previously, about 3-4 hours each day, making concrete, barrowing it and pouring it into 'cells' formed by pieces of timber. The top of each timber Val and I had carefully levelled (water level again) to ensure that the top of the levelled and tamped concrete would be about 100mm below the finished floor level. This leaves room for the underfloor insulation. As I write now, the concrete slab is flooded with water from all the lovely rain.


The next step: The conservatory frame arrives on a lorry in 3 days, complete with all the double glazed low-e glass ready to be installed when the frame is up. When the rain stops, I'll get on with building the rest of the dwarf wall at which point the excitement starts: will the frame fit? are my measurements correct? how long will it take? Already, the pressure's on... we've got our table and chairs on the new concrete floor (photo 3 behind) and look forward to having the finished structure which, we hope, will solve many of our old house's heating and insulation problems. We are, in short, fed up of living in a permanently frigid house. (It's frigid because there's no proper insulation and we refuse to run oil-fired heating except for an hour or so in the early morning.) The conservatory will help immensely because I intend to arrange for surplus heat to be ducted into the old house, effectively using the walls as a heat store. How effective this will be we can't be sure but it certainly will be better than the way things are now!

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Good news and bad news

Bry beginning the preparations for the new conservatory
First the good news: we got planning permission for the large conservatory that we wanted to build onto the front of the house. The intention was and is for passive solar heat capture. So now I'm starting the major excavations needed to prepare for the foundations and insulated floor. We're aiming for low U values throughout the structure so the floor and support wall will be well insulated. I try to do a couple of hours of levering and excavating of huge stones each day.

Now the bad news: Despite trying hard to get everything right so far as building regulations are concerned when constructing the eco-cottage, we've failed on several things in the final check. We are both quite angry and upset about this because we feel strongly that we just didn't get the support we needed, as self-builders, during construction. Let's hope matters are resolved satisfactorily when we meet up with the Building Control Manager in early January. Elsewhere in Europe, self build is common but in the UK, very few people have the courage and commitment to do it themselves. Part of the reason, I'm sure, is because 'the authorities' don't much like them and the system simply doesn't allow for non-professionals to receive kindly guidance so that they get the regulations bit right first time. In our case, you'd think that our cottage would be a shining beacon of effective renovation and proper construction for the low carbon build which we should all be aiming for. But nobody seems interested in our massive insulation and SAP rating of 107 (the maximum possible is 120). Shame!