Tuesday 28 December 2010

How does a heat pump work?

We get a lot of questions on this, so here's the answer. A heat pump does more or less what it says on the tin: it pumps energy from one place (usually outside) to another (usually inside). It turns out that you don't need to work very hard to move large amounts of energy around in this way, so heat pumps are quite efficient. 

The other thing people ask is how you can heat a home to 18 or 20 degress when the heat source, in the air or ground outside, say, is only 4 or 5 degrees. Perhaps the easiest way to think about that is just that the heat pump is also an energy concentrator of sorts - it is harvesting energy from a lot of air (or ground) and using it to warm up smaller amounts of air (or water) in your house.

What's perhaps most interesting about this is the source - How Things Work - The Universal Encyclopedia of Machines - first published in 1967. A reminder that we have been around the energy-saving block at least once before, so far (it has to be said) with no success. Have another look at this year's Godkin lecture by John Deutch of MIT for a first hand account of how frustrating that is for people who were involved in this sector in the 1970s.




PS I am not sure who has the copyright to these pages. I have looked for the original publisher online (Granada) but they are long gone, it is now 40 years since this book was published. There is a US website called How Stuff Works that has a useful (and somewhat more modern) page on heat pumps.

PPS heat pumps are not the best solution for many houses. The typical savings are often not better than a Band A condensing boiler running on mains gas, and the performance (in terms of comfort levels) can be poor, especially in large uninsulated homes with radiator-based central heating.

Monday 20 December 2010

Energy Flow Chart 2009

I've been meaning to post this for a while. If you've been enjoying the blog so far, then you should enjoy this (which comes from here and uses these as units) without further explanation. Click on the image for a full size view. 

It's not a tube map.

Saturday 11 December 2010

An unbelievable Christmas present

Happy Holidays! Over the past 2 weeks, every member of the US Congress (and every Governor's office around, and every state and local representative...) has received an unusual seasonal gift.

So what's the gift? A board game called This Way To Jobs. You can play it online, but let me save you a few minutes of your valuable time and tell you how it works.

Game Rules

  • You choose a counter - CEO, Director, Entrepreneur, etc
  • You roll the dice to move around the board - a bit like The Game of Life
  • You start in a Ghost Town - tumbleweed blows across the screen
  • Your goal is to get to Prosperity Park
  • Dodge as many regulations as possible on your way around 
  • If you get a regulation card, you move back 3 spaces, etc
  • Look out for Financial Reform Falls, Labour Lagoon and Energy Edge ... regulation lurks at every bend in the road

Wow. A truly elaborate and creative campaign and targeting the Environmental Protection Agency in particular. Not surprising in itself, but guess who is behind this campaign, so out of tune with contemporary reality? Maverick Republicans? Big Oil? Swiftboat Veterans for Truth? No, the campaign is run by the US Chamber of Commerce itself. I am truly astonished. 

Have a look at some of the cards you can draw :








Friday 3 December 2010

"Insulation is sexy" (Who said that?)

Somehow I managed to miss this whole thing, almost a year ago exactly today. So perhaps some of you had missed it too? If so, watch and enjoy!

(Hint: Use the slider to skip ahead to 1 min 50 secs and just watch the last 20 seconds or so. That's all you need!)