E
Eeyore
resistivity calcuations.
How can you do electronic engineering if you can't?
Ever heard the phrase "diminishing returns"?
That's what they said when the recommended insulation was 4 ".
Grahama
resistivity calcuations.
How can you do electronic engineering if you can't?
Ever heard the phrase "diminishing returns"?
Installing extra
insulation doesn't make all that much sense if the payback period is
longer than seven years, which is the average length of time that
people spend in the same house in the U.K.
JSprocket said:I'm pretty sure that these changes in the building standards are first
to look as though they care and are doing something, and second to
create work for another generation of hamfisted builders. Of course home
insulation is important, but bureaucrats are always keen to gold plate
the standards, as long as someone else is paying. Witness (witless?) IEE
regs Part 4.
Martin said:Although this is true you should also note from the same website that if
you already have 50mm or more of loft insulation then topping it up to
the arbitrary government recommended 270mm including full installation
costs will have a payback time in excess of 10 years.
http://www.energysavingtrust.org.uk/home_improvements/home_insulation_glazing/loft_insulation/
50-270 saves £45 / year, costs £500 installed so payback is 11 years.
If you don't believe in CO2 induced AGW you cannot advocate this policy
to top up all loft insulation to 270mm - the payback time is too long.
Regards,
Martin Brown
How can you do electronic engineering if you can't?
Ever heard the phrase "diminishing returns"? The amount of heat
getting through your loft insulation is inversely proportional to the
thickess of the insulation, and worrying about the last few
millimetres of extra thickness isn't all that clever. Installing extra
insulation doesn't make all that much sense if the payback period is
longer than seven years, which is the average length of time that
people spend in the same house in the U.K.
James said:What's wrong with an 11-year payback for a project with a 50-year+
lifetime?
You'd have to figure in the time-cost-of-money, but 9% annual
tax-free return with no risk is a pretty compelling investment.
James said:That view is short-sighted indeed--I'm surprised at you arguing for it Bill.
Better insulation creates a lasting value.
If the original buyer isn't going to get the full benefit of it, the value is still there, and
available for sale to a new purchaser.
If buyers aren't willing to pay for that value, perhaps they don't
realize it's there. Rating homes for energy consumption and cost--or
just making energy usage records available--should fix that.
Eeyore said:James Arthur wrote:
Blowed if I can think of one ! As opposed to the 'never pay for itself' PV Solar.
50+ year lifetime ? What do you build houses out of over there ? Cardboard ?
My own home is now 116 years old and I see NO reason why it shouldn't EASILY double or treble that
lifetime. It's simply rock solid ! Short of re-development demands for the entire area I can't think
why it wouldn't last say 500-700 years. But then we do build with real bricks over here !
500 year old buildings are not at all unusual in the UK. In my last year at what you call 'high
school' ? my classroom was located in a building dating IIRC from the year 800 or so.
Graham
Blowed if I can think of one ! As opposed to the 'never pay for itself' PVSolar.
50+ year lifetime ? What do you build houses out of over there ? Cardboard?
My own home is now 116 years old and I see NO reason why it shouldn't EASILY double or treble that
lifetime. It's simply rock solid ! Short of re-development demands for theentire area I can't think
why it wouldn't last say 500-700 years. But then we do build with real bricks over here !
500 year old buildings are not at all unusual in the UK. In my last year at what you call 'high
school' ? my classroom was located in a building dating IIRC from the year800 or so.
On Wed, 11 Jun 2008 18:44:34 GMT, Jonathan Kirwan
Note: Sorry for the delayed reply. I've had a bit of excessive
entertainment. I passed one kidney stone, fired one customer, and now
there's a rather large brush fire in the area.
I don't take anyone's word for anything. I like measurements,
calculations, and numbers, not authoritative bluster.
The problem is
that Google Scholar search does not do a very effective job of
searching for terms with a subscript. The best I can do is "CO2" and
"CO 2" which result in a total of 5,490 hits out of a total of 10,500
hits for 2008. Therefore, I stand corrected. Only about half the
articles in 2008 mention CO2.
Incidentally, the article you mentioned required payment for the PDF.
I have no problem with that. It's your suggestion that he read _all_
the papers that I find ummm.... indigestible. I believe I supplied
sufficient calculations to demonstrate that would be a rather
Herculean task.
Incidentally, I goofed. I counted the number of papers, not pages. I
can read one page per minute, not one paper per minute. Depending on
the average length of the papers, the time required for reading it all
will be substantially greater than I estimated. Sorry for the
mistake.
Been there, and done that. I was once an active member of the Flat
Earth Society. The methods used to demonstrate flatness does require
selective facts, as well as a creative interpretation of those facts.
Interestingly, those arguing in favor of the flat earth model, were
far more knowledgeable in geology and physics, than those supporting
the spherical model.
I can do anything I want. It's whether you or others reading my
comments choose to accept my selection of facts that's important.
Anything less would be censorship. Please don't tell me what I can
and cannot do.
I beg to differ. That's not how science *SHOULD* be discussed.
However, if one has a axe to grind, point to make, or political
agenda, stacking the facts in one's favor is commonly done. I'm more
into the political than the technical and find fact selection and
filtering to be the norm.
How much reading does one need to do before one is qualified to
discuss a subject?
I believe I demonstrated that _all_ the papers on
climate change is impractical (unless you simply want to muzzle
Graham).
There should be a workable number that entitles one to
proclaim limited competence. It should also be possible to prepare a
recommended reading list of articles. We can even issue certificates
of completing for those reading 1, 10, 100, or perhaps 1,000 such
articles, which offers the reader a corresponding competence and
credibility rating.
I do wish you would target your comments on the facts, opinions, and
data presented, and not waste your time attacking the source. If you
wish to debate this on personal terms, there's always email.
In this case, you're correct. Water vapor is an aerosol and should
not be classed as a gas.
<http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=142>
The overlaps complicate things, but it's clear that water
vapour is the single most important absorber (between 36%
and 66% of the greenhouse effect), and together with clouds
makes up between 66% and 85%. CO2 alone makes up between
9 and 26%, while the O3 and the other minor GHG absorbers
consist of up to 7 and 8% of the effect, respectively.
As for my possession of any clues, I am not an expert on the topic of
climate change. I am not a climatologist, weather researcher, or
computer model builder. I have a well tuned BS filter. I do read
extensively on global warming. At this point, I'm still undecided on
many aspects of global warming.
Perhaps, but I certainly wood. I've done some public speaking and
fairly good at promotion and propoganda. Converting science into
politics is an art that most technical people do rather badly. Graham
has a good start on the methodology, but has a long way to go before
he can be as smooth and accomplished at presenting his facts as Al
Gore.
I think I understand the question. Politically, the difference is
that most water vapor emissions are not man made, while the increase
in CO2 emissions is substantially man made (ignoring bovine
flatulence). If it's man made, the presumption is that it can be
mitigated. If it's natural, mother nature will have a fit if we mess
with her processes.
James Arthur said:That view is short-sighted indeed--I'm surprised at you arguing for it
Bill.
Better insulation creates a lasting value. If the original buyer isn't
going to get the full benefit of it, the value is still there, and
available for sale to a new purchaser.
If buyers aren't willing to pay for that value, perhaps they don't realize
it's there. Rating homes for energy consumption and cost--or just making
energy usage records available--should fix that.
Martin said:That depends very much on whether it is pure gas phase water molecules
(when it is truly a triatomic gas) or condensed into particles of water
or ice as fog/clouds.
Martin said:If you are a cash rich high rate taxpayer then it would make sense
(although the DIY option would make much better economic sense).
But if you had to borrow money to do it (which it the usual assumption
for the purposes of deciding economic viability) with loan interest
rates close to 9% the capital investment looks much less attractive.
I don't know what the US figures are but in the UK people move homes on
average every 7 years so you ideally want a payback on roughly that
timescale for it to be worthwhile in a hardline economic sense.
If you don't have £500, a) how'd you get that house? and b) you oughtn't
be hiring servants to do your chores--install it yourself! ;-)
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
James said:Martin said:But if you had to borrow money to do it [insulation] (which it the usual assumption
for the purposes of deciding economic viability) with loan interest
rates close to 9% the capital investment looks much less attractive.
If you don't have £500, a) how'd you get that house? and b) you oughtn't
be hiring servants to do your chores--install it yourself! ;-)
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
krw said:Martin Brown wrote:
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
IIRC, it's up quite a bit from what it was twenty years ago.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Hardly any do. It's usually easier and cheaper to start over,
unless there are monkey wrenches thrown in like property tax
abatements.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
I can make exactly the opposite argument. I might like nice looking
things, like cherry cabinets. I work so I can buy things that
please me. Insulation doesn't affect my senses at all, just my
wallet. There is no emotional attachment to my wallet, so as long
as I can afford to go without more insulation it's not a "useful"
place to put money. When it pays for itself, it becomes "useful" -
not until.
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
Snake? Cockroach? Inane insurance company mascot?
Eeyore said:James said:If you don't have £500, a) how'd you get that house? and b) you oughtn'tMartin said:But if you had to borrow money to do it [insulation] (which it the usual assumption
for the purposes of deciding economic viability) with loan interest
rates close to 9% the capital investment looks much less attractive.
be hiring servants to do your chores--install it yourself! ;-)
Also note that gov't grants are available for insulation improvements in some cases and also people on
benefits may get it done for them for free.
I'd rather see a few x £500 of gov't funds spent on insulating houses than £ 5-30k each time spend
subsidising idiotic PV solar or personal roof-mounted windmill tokenism.
It is easily do-able on a DIY basis too. I should know ! Done it more than once and the materials are
cheap, cheap , cheap. Doesn't really take long either. Put a day aside or so.
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
I've now owned this property > 25 yrs ! Why move ? It's an excellent location and an ideal size for
me, plus I like Victorian style 'cottages'.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
Yes quite. The amount of money that 'goes down the toilet' every 10 ? years with a new kitchen is a
disgrace.
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
How do you manage that ?
Graham
krw said:Martin Brown wrote:
I don't know what the US figures are but in the UK people move homes on
average every 7 years so you ideally want a payback on roughly that
timescale for it to be worthwhile in a hardline economic sense.
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
IIRC, it's up quite a bit from what it was twenty years ago.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Hardly any do. It's usually easier and cheaper to start over,
unless there are monkey wrenches thrown in like property tax
abatements.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
I can make exactly the opposite argument. I might like nice looking
things, like cherry cabinets. I work so I can buy things that
please me. Insulation doesn't affect my senses at all, just my
wallet. There is no emotional attachment to my wallet, so as long
as I can afford to go without more insulation it's not a "useful"
place to put money. When it pays for itself, it becomes "useful" -
not until.
Insulation improves my comfort, silently, without noisy, nasty
machinery. That's valuable as in "something to be valued" to me.
Some folks fight Nature with energy and technology. I embrace her, but
insulation hedges the bet, 'cause we all know Nature can be a mother. ;-)
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
Snake? Cockroach? Inane insurance company mascot?
I prefer "ascetic," but answer to "Nature boy" as well.
Eeyore said:James said:Martin Brown wrote:
But if you had to borrow money to do it [insulation] (which it the usual assumption
for the purposes of deciding economic viability) with loan interest
rates close to 9% the capital investment looks much less attractive.
If you don't have £500, a) how'd you get that house? and b) you oughtn't
be hiring servants to do your chores--install it yourself! ;-)
Also note that gov't grants are available for insulation improvements in some cases and also people on
benefits may get it done for them for free.
I'd rather see a few x £500 of gov't funds spent on insulating housesthan £ 5-30k each time spend
subsidising idiotic PV solar or personal roof-mounted windmill tokenism..
It is easily do-able on a DIY basis too. I should know ! Done it more than once and the materials are
cheap, cheap , cheap. Doesn't really take long either. Put a day aside or so.
I don't know what the US figures are but in the UK people move homes on
average every 7 years so you ideally want a payback on roughly that
timescale for it to be worthwhile in a hardline economic sense.
Here I've heard 3 years, but I can't vouch for it.
I've now owned this property > 25 yrs ! Why move ? It's an excellent location and an ideal size for
me, plus I like Victorian style 'cottages'.
Really though, if that's your criterion, hardly any improvements make sense.
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
Yes quite. The amount of money that 'goes down the toilet' every 10 ? years with a new kitchen is a
disgrace.
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
How do you manage that ?
Graham
As our fathers did and humankind has done since time began: When it's
hot, I eat less, wear less, exercise more, and adapt. Physically. Then
I'm comfortable. Avoiding air conditioning speeds the adaptation.
When it's cold, I wear more, eat more, stack more comforters on the bed,
and I'm comfortable.
Amazing, but you _do_ adapt. Really. It just takes a few weeks at each
change of season.
It's easy.
krw said:As our fathers did and humankind has done since time began: When it'sEeyore said:James Arthur wrote:
Meanwhile people love "kitchen remodels"--commonly $20-30k to re-arrange
things, landfill the old cabinets, creating no new value. I'd rather
have the insulation.[1]
Yes quite. The amount of money that 'goes down the toilet' every 10 ? years with a new kitchen is a
disgrace.
[1] But it wouldn't save me any money--I use neither heat nor cooling.
How do you manage that ?
Graham
hot, I eat less, wear less, exercise more, and adapt. Physically. Then
I'm comfortable. Avoiding air conditioning speeds the adaptation.
I don't know about yours, but my father owned a furnace, as did his.
When it's cold, I wear more, eat more, stack more comforters on the bed,
and I'm comfortable.
You must live in a moderate climate.
...perhaps the desert. It would take more than a few weeks to adapt
to a 100F temperature swing.