Scott Adams wrote an article called How I (Almost) Saved the Earth.
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Scott Adams wrote an article called How I (Almost) Saved the Earth.
Posted by
vt
at
8/24/2010 07:14:00 AM
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Labels: Dilbert, green, green house, Scott Adams
There's been a comment on Green Dryer post that y'all might like:
You can find a nice version of this along with a custom base that raises the height of the dryer at:Thanks, Owen. Good timing, too - winter is coming.
http://www.heat-helper.com/
Posted by
vt
at
11/07/2009 07:55:00 PM
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Labels: dryer, efficiency, energy conservation, erv, green, green house, hrv
So here cometh a fresh pair of thermostats (Honeywell RTH7500 and RiteTemp GPMG8085C), both equipped with default schedules taken from EnergyStar ® Program Requirements for Programmable Thermostats: Partner Commitments (look for Table 2: Acceptable Setpoint Times and Temperature Settings). It was summer, and the default settings were too cold for us, so we changed them.
But the defaults for the heating season were left in place.
Now that the heating season is here, and it is eventually getting quite cold outside, several interesting things are popping up.
First of all, let's take a look at default EPA compliant settings.
Wake: 6AM, 70°F.
Day: 8AM, 62°F.
Evening: 6PM, 70°F.
Sleep: 10PM, 62°F.
Then, let's go back and read the long rant about whether you should shut off your A/C or leave it running.
Then, let's take a look at the temperature spread for the schedule above. 8°F.
That's quite a lot.
The very reason I've started thinking about writing this article is that one of my units (Lennox split), being perfectly capable in cooling mode, seems to either hit the balance point, or otherwise severely degrade its performance, when the ambient temperature drops lower than about 45°F - and, as a result, it is unable to bring the zone it serves from 62°F to 70°F in two hours.
Even worse the temperature actually drops to about 65°F by 6AM, and it barely makes it to 68°F by 8AM - forget 62 to 70.
While this is definitely quite uncool, it also points out another fact that is not on the surface: the unit works at the top of its efficiency curve. It doesn't cycle, it spends initial 10-20 minutes approaching the design efficiency and stays there.
That was the positive, now, another negative - since it serves two rooms, one of which is about five times size the other - guess what, by the end of the two hour run the smaller room is HOT. Balancing the dampers manually will not help since it'll shoot the balance for other conditions - like, the evening, when the ambient temperature is significantly higher and the runtime of the unit is very short in comparison.
So, what's the point?
Posted by
vt
at
12/18/2007 11:23:00 AM
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Labels: distributed, efficiency, enterprise, EPA, green, green house, hindsight is 20/20, surprise, unintended consequences
Looking outside of my window and seeing a giant plume of steam coming out of my dryer's exhaust.
Immediately thinking that next time I'll be doing remodeling around the laundry room, or building my own house, I'll definitely install an ERV capturing all that heat that is being wasted by the dryer in the heating season, and a bypass allowing it to escape in the cooling season.
Also thinking that it would be a dumbest idea possible to direct the dryer exhaust into the house because of associated humidity and smell.
Posted by
vt
at
12/08/2007 10:17:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: dryer, efficiency, erv, green, green house, hrv