Joe Blake
27th June 2010, 01:09
I moved into this house about 10 or so years ago. Although it is of double brick wall construction it was not insulated in the ceiling and consequently required a lot of work (and energy) to keep it either warm or cool.
About 5 years ago I started insulating the ceiling space with fibreglass batts. Because of increasing mobility difficulties due to arthritis of the feet, I wasn't able to complete the task, but nevertheless it has made significant difference, and over the last 3 years, I have used no artificial heating, and only electrical cooling for 4 days in the last 12 months. (And since those were the days when I was generating more power from the PVs than the aircon was using, I don't think that counts.;))
Here is the western face of the house, with its shadecloth curtains.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/rear01.jpg
I have now got a solar hot water system and (in this photo) 1 Kw of photovoltaic generator.
Last year I caused work to commence on adding a patio, enclosed, with a section of transparent roof.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio04.jpg
I have installed an 1100 litre water tank to catch roof rain runoff.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio02.jpg
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio05.jpg
The transparent roof allows sunlight to shine of the photovoltaic panels of my two electric trikes, as well as a "hothouse" effect in winter, which is great for drying my laundry when the day is overcast.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio07.jpg
Over the last three days our minimum temperatures have been in vicinity 2-3 degrees C, with some places in the suburbs reaching -0.6 degrees C, which is 0.1 degrees off our coldest temperature ever recorded.
By using a small 40 watt electric fan
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio09.jpg
I can blow the warm air into the inside of the house via the rear door.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio06.jpg
Although the door is of very light construction, by the application of "double glazing" principles to the glass via a sheet of heavy duty clear vinyl, as well the windows, and using "bubble wrap" on the non-glazed portion of the door, I've reduced heat transfer in both directions, so in summer time I get more heat entry through the uninsulated areas of the ceiling, which I can plot using a non-contact thermometer. I'm hoping before summer comes to pay a contractor to come in and complete the insulation. In the meantime, I've created a partial solution by taping kitchen aluminium foil to the underside of the ceiling inside the house, just where the hotspots are. This seems to have been pretty worthwhile, and in the previous summer it made a measured 3-4 degrees difference in the ceiling temperature.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/P5070001.jpg
As you can see, the patio also doubles as my bicycle parking area, as well as shelf storage. And if ever I sell my bicycles, I've got a great spot for a small indoor vegetable garden.:p
Joe
About 5 years ago I started insulating the ceiling space with fibreglass batts. Because of increasing mobility difficulties due to arthritis of the feet, I wasn't able to complete the task, but nevertheless it has made significant difference, and over the last 3 years, I have used no artificial heating, and only electrical cooling for 4 days in the last 12 months. (And since those were the days when I was generating more power from the PVs than the aircon was using, I don't think that counts.;))
Here is the western face of the house, with its shadecloth curtains.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/rear01.jpg
I have now got a solar hot water system and (in this photo) 1 Kw of photovoltaic generator.
Last year I caused work to commence on adding a patio, enclosed, with a section of transparent roof.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio04.jpg
I have installed an 1100 litre water tank to catch roof rain runoff.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio02.jpg
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio05.jpg
The transparent roof allows sunlight to shine of the photovoltaic panels of my two electric trikes, as well as a "hothouse" effect in winter, which is great for drying my laundry when the day is overcast.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio07.jpg
Over the last three days our minimum temperatures have been in vicinity 2-3 degrees C, with some places in the suburbs reaching -0.6 degrees C, which is 0.1 degrees off our coldest temperature ever recorded.
By using a small 40 watt electric fan
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio09.jpg
I can blow the warm air into the inside of the house via the rear door.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/patio06.jpg
Although the door is of very light construction, by the application of "double glazing" principles to the glass via a sheet of heavy duty clear vinyl, as well the windows, and using "bubble wrap" on the non-glazed portion of the door, I've reduced heat transfer in both directions, so in summer time I get more heat entry through the uninsulated areas of the ceiling, which I can plot using a non-contact thermometer. I'm hoping before summer comes to pay a contractor to come in and complete the insulation. In the meantime, I've created a partial solution by taping kitchen aluminium foil to the underside of the ceiling inside the house, just where the hotspots are. This seems to have been pretty worthwhile, and in the previous summer it made a measured 3-4 degrees difference in the ceiling temperature.
http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j245/saxeharp/house/P5070001.jpg
As you can see, the patio also doubles as my bicycle parking area, as well as shelf storage. And if ever I sell my bicycles, I've got a great spot for a small indoor vegetable garden.:p
Joe