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#1
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Frost already. Early?
I think it is the begining of the end of even autumn.
The grass was lightly crunching under my feet earlier this morning. My car was flashing -1 to -2. with a slight dusting of frost on the windscreen. Just got myself a rocket off of the boss 'cos I should have turned the heating on for the office staff. To be fair I should have set it. October 1st and frosty. What next? Baz |
#2
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Frost already. Early?
Baz wrote:
I think it is the begining of the end of even autumn. The grass was lightly crunching under my feet earlier this morning. My car was flashing -1 to -2. with a slight dusting of frost on the windscreen. I've forgotten where you are located. Over in sunny Essex it was a warm piddling it down 1st October this morning. Nice clear full mooned sky last night, too (or maybe one day past it). Just got myself a rocket off of the boss 'cos I should have turned the heating on for the office staff. To be fair I should have set it. October 1st and frosty. What next? I've instructed Nick that the central heating is not allowed on until November. I think he's glad he's out of the country for at leat half of October. ;-) (Although I may have a fight on my hands when he comes back and he's been basking in the twenties) |
#3
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Frost already. Early?
In message , Baz
writes I think it is the begining of the end of even autumn. The grass was lightly crunching under my feet earlier this morning. My car was flashing -1 to -2. with a slight dusting of frost on the windscreen. Just got myself a rocket off of the boss 'cos I should have turned the heating on for the office staff. To be fair I should have set it. October 1st and frosty. What next? There was a roof frost here a week or so back. We've had a run of warm autumns, but I don't think that frost in early October or even September is all that unusual in the long run. Some years we get an early October frost, and then no more for over a month - at this time of year frosts depend on getting the right combination of clear skies and low winds. It does seem to be cooler this year. Last year I didn't turn the CH on until December, but this year the temperature has already hovering just above the temperature where heating is needed for a couple of weeks. Baz -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#4
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Frost already. Early?
"Stewart Robert Hinsley" wrote in message ... In message , Baz writes I think it is the begining of the end of even autumn. The grass was lightly crunching under my feet earlier this morning. My car was flashing -1 to -2. with a slight dusting of frost on the windscreen. Just got myself a rocket off of the boss 'cos I should have turned the heating on for the office staff. To be fair I should have set it. October 1st and frosty. What next? There was a roof frost here a week or so back. We've had a run of warm autumns, but I don't think that frost in early October or even September is all that unusual in the long run. Some years we get an early October frost, and then no more for over a month - at this time of year frosts depend on getting the right combination of clear skies and low winds. It does seem to be cooler this year. Last year I didn't turn the CH on until December, but this year the temperature has already hovering just above the temperature where heating is needed for a couple of weeks. Having read the comments on CH, how low does the inside temperature have to get before you turn the CH on? I suppose mornings and evenings are more important than mid-day or overnight unless you are in the house al day. For me, 14C inside the house is just a bit too cool. Cheers Dave R -- No plan survives contact with the enemy. [Not even bunny] Helmuth von Moltke the Elder (\__/) (='.'=) (")_(") |
#5
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Frost already. Early?
Martin wrote:
Will you be setting the thermostat to 16C for the rest of the winter? There will be a thermostat war later this year. I will turn the heat off until it hits 17 or 18. 16 is too cold if I'm just sat down. Nick likes it on till 21. :-/ |
#6
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Quote:
__________________
getstats - A society in which our lives and choices are enriched by an understanding of statistics. Go to www.getstats.org.uk for more information |
#7
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Frost already. Early?
On Mon, 1 Oct 2012 11:31:34 +0100, "David WE Roberts"
wrote: Having read the comments on CH, how low does the inside temperature have to get before you turn the CH on? I suppose mornings and evenings are more important than mid-day or overnight unless you are in the house al day. For me, 14C inside the house is just a bit too cool. Cheers Dave R I suppose a lot depends on where the central thermostat is. Here it's in the hall (away from the front door) and is set at 12.5C. There are thermostatic valves on all rads. The kickspace heaters in the kitchen are rarely turned on and one of the rads in the lounge and the one in my home office are permanently turned off. FWIW No cavity wall insulation as there are bats in the cavity. I've also found it a lot cheaper to set the (21 year old) boiler thermostat to low and both heating and water to constant. I was told last week that as the boiler is about 85% efficient and a new one would be about 90% efficient, it's not financially worthwhile changing it. Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling from the East End of Swansea Bay where sometimes it's raining and sometimes it's not. |
#8
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Frost already. Early?
On Mon, 1 Oct 2012 11:31:34 +0100, David WE Roberts wrote:
Having read the comments on CH, how low does the inside temperature have to get before you turn the CH on? We never turn it off. The programable thermostat might not trip the heating for a couple of weeks around midsummer first thing in the morning and late afternoon but for the last month it's being doing that consistently and more recently firing up during the day. Living room is set to 18.5C daytime,rising to 20C from 1600 to 2300, overnight is 15C I think. There is nearly always some one in. For me, 14C inside the house is just a bit too cool. Agreed, for a living room not too bad for a bedroom but would require fully fluffed up feather and down winter duvet, a blanket and socks. As to frosts we've had several ground frosts already and possibly one air frost. 4 more weeks and we can expect the first snow... -- Cheers Dave. |
#9
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Frost already. Early?
Martin wrote:
Our CH is programmed so that unless it is very, very cold it doesn't come on at night and is set to a low temperature so that it is virtually off during most of the day - the sun heats the living room so on most days it isn't needed on anyway. We have Danfoss taps on all the radiators. The radiators are all switched off upstairs, and the 'cold' temp is about 10' for nighttime. But cos of the thermostat war, it's not always clear to the central heating when it's night time |
#10
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Frost already. Early?
On Mon, 01 Oct 2012 14:56:23 +0200, Martin wrote:
Agreed, for a living room not too bad for a bedroom but would require fully fluffed up feather and down winter duvet, a blanket and socks. We have synthetic hollow fibre duvet fillings. Not keen on synthetic hollow fibre fillings, if you get too hot the space doesn't "breath" as nicely as a feather and down. And with feather and down you can regulate the warmth by fluffing it up (or not). -- Cheers Dave. |
#11
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Frost already. Early?
On Mon, 01 Oct 2012 16:24:27 +0200, Martin wrote:
The chap who told me tested it and said it was 85% efficient as at last week. Interesting. How did he measure the efficiency? Normally by measuring the temperature of the flue gases. The cooler they are the more heat has been taken out of them on passage through the boiler. I've been thinking about piping from the flue to the greenhouse to utilise that wasted 15% of the heat. Mind you don't gas those in the greenhouse The plants won't mind the warmth and CO2, might have to keep an eye on the humidity. -- Cheers Dave. |
#12
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Frost already. Early?
On Mon, 01 Oct 2012 17:34:28 +0200, Martin wrote:
I've been thinking about piping from the flue to the greenhouse to utilise that wasted 15% of the heat. Mind you don't gas those in the greenhouse The plants won't mind the warmth and CO2, might have to keep an eye on the humidity. There's acid in the flue gasses. Rain water is acid. OK carbonic rather than sulphuric or nitric that'll be in flue gases but the concentration is very low otherwise boilers and their flues wouldn't last as long as they do... -- Cheers Dave. |
#13
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Quote:
We've got radiator valves which helps to keep rooms at vastly different temperatures, provided we are good about shutting doors. I like a very warm bathroom, I need a warm study as I'm working at my computer and letting my metabolism run low, but I like a cool bedroom.
__________________
getstats - A society in which our lives and choices are enriched by an understanding of statistics. Go to www.getstats.org.uk for more information |
#14
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Frost already. Early?
In article , Sacha
writes We find just the opposite. The manmade fibres are too hot and make the duvets too heavy. We have feather pillows and duvets and pure cotton sheets as polycotton is too warm. The best I've found is a duvet with raw silk 'filling'. Thin, light and good for summer and winter. (Its also been through the washing machine). -- regards andyw |
#15
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Frost already. Early?
In article , Sacha
writes We saw silk duvets being made in China. I think they cost about £300 over here and they weren't cheap there. Our feather duvet is one of those with two layers but we've never found it necessary to use two. Our house is pretty warm and rarely draughty, so one layer does us fine. Not sure about ones with silk outers, but the cotton outer and raw silk inner are considerably cheaper than that (otherwise I wouldn't have one -- regards andyw |
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