Maximizing Your Condensing Gas Boiler's Efficiency

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2021
  • #boiler #efficiency #condensing
    In this video, we discuss why most gas condensing boilers are not running efficiently and what can be done about it.
    If you find this topic interesting and would like to learn more about efficiency and heating system design and principles, I highly recommend those two courses below:
    courses.heatgeek.com/
    heatingacademynorthampton.co.uk/
    Visit my web site here:
    www.urbanplumbers.co.uk
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Комментарии • 654

  • @richardhanmer
    @richardhanmer Год назад +27

    This is by far the most interesting and original heating related video I've seen in a very long time. ~My mind has been blown. A real eye-opener and give how insightful this info is I'm puzzled as to why other UK-based plumbers on RUclips haven't talked about it. Really glad you made you the video.

  • @irenemarwood7425
    @irenemarwood7425 Год назад +1

    This is the best vid on this topic ive ever seen. Discussing issues that virtually nobody talks about

  • @dermotnangle3648
    @dermotnangle3648 5 месяцев назад +2

    An excellent technical and professional presentation. This is by far the most comprehensive technical explanation of Condensing Boiler functionality I have viewed. Congratulations Czesc Szymon on a wonderful piece of work.

  • @jassinghIG45
    @jassinghIG45 2 года назад +14

    Love the knowledge and ease of explanation. Very few are aware of this hence the epidemic. Especially amongst the older veterans that don’t want to learn.

  • @Kulvinder1974
    @Kulvinder1974 Год назад +1

    Hi there, thanks for your videos.
    As a user, I have learnt a heck of a lot about efficiencies. I have now realised that I have been running my heating system way too hot. I love these videos, they are so informative.
    Thanks again.

  • @CommercialGasEngineerVideos
    @CommercialGasEngineerVideos Год назад +5

    Excellent video. Had a long debate with a colleague on boiler efficiency and this settled it. Thanks, saved us a boxing match.

  • @romanpikuzinski3434
    @romanpikuzinski3434 2 года назад +1

    Wow! Excellent video.
    Thank you for very clear explanation how the system works.

  • @ecowarrior4355
    @ecowarrior4355 2 года назад +8

    Really good explanation of how things are. Hopefully some if not many may be inspired to change things for the better!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +3

      Kim, thanks for your comment. Anyone who wants to know more about the topic go to Kim’s web site and check his training. Link in the description.

  • @MrAvant123
    @MrAvant123 Год назад

    Brilliant video. I am not a heating engineer but have spent a great deal of time understanding mine and my mothers worcester boilers and this has helped me further as I believe I will need to replace my Greenstar 42 soon.

  • @foppo100
    @foppo100 2 года назад +2

    Our first little boiler was a Small glowworm system.A tank in the loft and an emergen heater in the cupboard.That little boiler lasted twenty years it got replaced because of the water tanks in the loft.Igo to old climbing in there to check the systems out once in a while.I still miss that system sometimes that Glowworm boiler was so easy to serve,It heated 8 radiators never let us down.

  • @pb871
    @pb871 Год назад

    Brilliant video. Clear and well explained. Thank you!

  • @malcolmwatson6127
    @malcolmwatson6127 2 года назад +9

    Great, clear video. You're spot on about the over-sized boiler 'epidemic'.

    • @CommercialGasEngineerVideos
      @CommercialGasEngineerVideos Год назад +1

      It must be a money making thing and lack of knowledge that pushes this epidemic. It's interesting to see how a few commercial boilers and a powerful pump can supply thousands of people with hw and ch. Compared to thousands of overrated boilers. Well, keeps thousands of engineers in a job I guess.

    • @claudiahamminger-stone3274
      @claudiahamminger-stone3274 Год назад

      thankfully boilers now have massive turn down ratios, although I notice that no figures for fuel efficiency are ever published for a gas boiler that's running at just 7% of its rated output... Does anyone else here suspect that they're horrendously inefficient at these burn rates?

  • @C4Real3Danimation
    @C4Real3Danimation 2 года назад +9

    Thank you so much! There is a dire gas crisis going on in the Netherlands and this video is already saving me money. I also now know why my gas boiler dies every 10 years!

  • @SwedeEad
    @SwedeEad 2 года назад +7

    Very interesting and useful. I know which direction to go now. I was kind of heading that way but you added a lot of information that will make sure I can make the right decisions about our heating system - which is a bit of a Frankenstein's monster as it has been added to over the years , like the house. Most people don't know what you say in this video so are easily sold systems that are inappropriate. The system we have came with the (old) house. Radiators get hot, water gets hot, what more do we need to know? Well, a lot! Thanks for this valuable information. BTW we have an Ideal Vogue C40 (we live near Hull where Ideal is based). When we lived in London the heat loss from the flat was so low we seldom turned the heating on had the windows open most of the time to cool the place down!

  • @tried2call260
    @tried2call260 2 года назад +2

    Excellent, excellent, excellent !!!
    Outstanding knowledge base and ability to communicate it !

  • @martinblondell9797
    @martinblondell9797 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic video the knowledge you have is astonishing. Cheers.

  • @Burak-lz9jk
    @Burak-lz9jk 2 года назад +2

    That's an amazing video and very informative. Thanks and greetings from Ireland!

  • @qbasz
    @qbasz Год назад +4

    Czesc Szymon, great video. This should be a compulsory learning video for all boiler fitters. In regards to boiler size in Uk homes, I think the size is often related to the number of bathrooms and a possible number of taps with hot water open at the same time, where we all know that water flow in the network and pipe sizing is not good enough to manage that. Therefore, as you said over -sizing boilers is a plague in this country.

  • @stixstonesinvestors5413
    @stixstonesinvestors5413 3 месяца назад

    Explained so well. My gas safe mates all got sent this video. Your knowledge is inspiring, I just want to keep pushing and learning. Watched your vids over and over again.
    Completing my 1st stage in 2 weeks then getting them 2 books and going to start with heat geek mid March.
    Thanks for sharing Simon. You and Adam demonstrate and explain so well.
    I seriously love learning the knowledge
    You the man mate 👌🏼

  • @richardmcmaster9389
    @richardmcmaster9389 2 года назад

    The method I use to maximise efficiency while heating the hot water tank is to set the room stat low at the same time so the boiler is not heating the rads. Great video.

  • @darlapurvis1439
    @darlapurvis1439 2 года назад +2

    Excellent explanation and details on condenser boilers…thank you!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      You are welcome. I am glad you liked it

  • @GeneralTJP
    @GeneralTJP 2 года назад

    Absolutely brilliant video, clear and concise with so much knowledge, Thank you.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      Thank you for your kind words sir!

    • @GeneralTJP
      @GeneralTJP 2 года назад

      @@UrbanPlumbers No Thank you, I feel like I've just discovered gold. Ps, I've sent you an email

  • @Spodokamono
    @Spodokamono Год назад

    What a helpful video, a lot of info shared and superbly presented.
    Thanks

  • @georgeturner6648
    @georgeturner6648 2 года назад

    Brilliant Thank you. I have heat only with stored HW with solar thermal input. The boiler needs changing soon. You’ve given me a lot to consider. I think the hardest part will be finding a competent engineer like you!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +4

      Check ‘heat geek map’ on google! There will be one near you !

  • @OggyGTA
    @OggyGTA 2 года назад +1

    Great video! This has given me a lot to think about!

  • @problem9
    @problem9 Год назад +1

    thanks for great video! great explanation and info. i was using nest + combi condens protherm (vaillant group) + outdoor sensor, so heating wasn't that terrible (based on outdoor temperature), but nest wasn't used as it should be. so I ordered vaillant vr 33 from Netherlands, connect to protherm via x32 port and everything is working even with hot water heating.

  • @Benblyth
    @Benblyth Год назад

    Best video on the subject I’ve seen. Fantastic work, thank you.

  • @kuldilakh7106
    @kuldilakh7106 6 месяцев назад

    Excellent, One step done towards the understanding of Heating efficiency.! 😊

  • @takearidewithme3589
    @takearidewithme3589 Год назад +4

    I have been in Heating and cooling for 20 years in the USA northeast and always love to see how things are done elsewhere. I think you have great knowledge in hydronic heating systems and heat loss.

    • @stephendoherty8291
      @stephendoherty8291 5 месяцев назад

      How do US furnaces compare (excluding the often massive heat losses that US homes are built and sold with). Its not like the showers are that much bigger or baths. I presume the heat loss return from the greater number (or much bigger) US home radiators. I see Heat pumps getting more US traction even if gas prices are tiny compared to Europe.

  • @jayseabie215
    @jayseabie215 2 года назад +2

    This is the best video I've seen that explains all this. Well done! This guy really knows his stuff! I would give u a call mate but I doubt u travel north of the river!!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      Email me. All depends on type of work.

  • @chrissdavey
    @chrissdavey 2 года назад

    Excellent info. Very interesting. This guy really knows his stuff!

  • @iheggis86
    @iheggis86 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for uploading again - Great to see 👍

  • @thetroopersk
    @thetroopersk Месяц назад

    i decreased the power output on my previous gas boiler to minimum...job done...

  • @joes250
    @joes250 Год назад

    Excellent video. Very clear and well explained

  • @larkhill2119
    @larkhill2119 Год назад

    You're a superstar mate. Learned so much from that video.

  • @schrodingerscat1863
    @schrodingerscat1863 2 года назад +58

    What an absolutely brilliant video, so much information to think about and so many ways to greatly improve efficiency on existing systems. My own boiler is hugely over rated for my home all because the installer talked me into having the much larger boiler. Now I know that all the steam I see billowing out of the flue is really bad for efficiency and essentially negates the whole point of a more expensive condensing boiler to begin with.

    • @Martindyna
      @Martindyna 2 года назад +3

      You still gain by having a condensing boiler since the minimum efficiency is typically 85% with a hot return temperature.
      My installer said it was good when the flue started exhausting plenty of fog, I thought it better not to correct him.

    • @pault1289
      @pault1289 Год назад

      Agree, this is an excellent explanation. Wish I knew this when I've replaced a few boilers over the years in my last three houses.

    • @tonyclough9844
      @tonyclough9844 Год назад

      No a bigger boiler means you can turn down your boiler stat, so try nudging it down.
      Fitting a bigger engine in a car can cut your fuel consumption, believe me.

    • @schrodingerscat1863
      @schrodingerscat1863 Год назад +9

      @@tonyclough9844 It won't modulate down low enough except on really cold days so it is always running inefficiently and cycling all the time.

    • @claudiahamminger-stone3274
      @claudiahamminger-stone3274 Год назад +1

      Great, and here you can use this DIY solution to save another 30% of your heating bills:
      www.dropbox.com/s/16zwaq7q3u4r2g7/22%20save30%25ads-1.jpg?raw=1

  • @VathSok
    @VathSok 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for the great and detail explanation. Great knowledge and experience you are sharing here.
    We've just installed a new Combi boiler last week, Lochinvar NKC199N. I've noticed the installer set the outlet temperature to 180F/82C and the return temperature to inlet is somewhere around 169F/76C. To me, this temperature set point is way to high but with the fact that it was cold out side last week 5F/-15C, we are in Massachusetts.
    We have 4 zones, 3 zones control forced hot water baseboard and the other zone controls radiant floor (concrete slap for our greenhouse, we use a mixing valve to reduce water temp to 130F/54C for floor). So while the other 3 zones satisfied the room temperature, the 4th zone for the radiant floor seems to keep running most of the time to keep the slap warm with this cold temperature outside, but since the outlet set point is180F/82C, I feel that we are wasting the energy.
    So my question is should I change the outlet set point to 130F/54C? so we can just send 130F/54C straight to radiant floor, ignoring the mixing valve, and I expect the return temperature to drop to somewhere 110F/43C. Is "130F/54C" good enough for baseboard heater ?

    • @CrashUK28
      @CrashUK28 2 года назад

      I had same. installed new boiler at set point temp was 85c. heating the house in 5 mins.

    • @deano-qj9tj
      @deano-qj9tj 2 года назад

      its probably about right if the outside temp is -15c . mine is on weather compensation and it would automatically run at that sort of flow temp if it -0c or less. when your outside temp reaches 11c or above try setting it to 65c and see how it goes

    • @richardc1983
      @richardc1983 2 года назад +1

      Set to 55c see how you get on, if its still heating it well, lower it to 50c and see again, keep going until the boiler is set low enough that it keeps your home warm. The lower you can get the flow temp the boiler condenses even more and you get even more efficiency.

  • @barriewright2857
    @barriewright2857 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the education and information 🙏.

  • @hansv.d.p.8679
    @hansv.d.p.8679 2 года назад +5

    Great info again, good subject again. I bought my self a vaillant boiler ecotec plus, the smallest because it can run/burn at low kw. So you are verry right in your video i hope peole will understand. But we need also to investing in isolate our homes...I just invest in isolate my apartment from the 60..good video..greetings from Rotterdam

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      At least in Netherlands you can get VR33 and use open therm on your Vaillant !

    • @hansv.d.p.8679
      @hansv.d.p.8679 2 года назад +1

      @@UrbanPlumbers yes i check it is standard installed now i fitted a honeywell touch..easy peasy

  • @martinwarner1178
    @martinwarner1178 4 месяца назад

    Brilliant, interesting video. Thank you. Peace and goodwill.

  • @nuppard
    @nuppard 2 года назад +7

    Excellent video & thanks for all the useful advice. A few thoughts though. I live in a detached house with solid brick walls & a cavity walled extension to two sides. Heat loss is noticeable after only a few hours on cold days but the temperature drop overnight only usually amounts to 2-3 C over 8 hours or so before the boiler fires again in the morning. So does this still justify load compensating controls?
    I like the idea of weather compensating for my regular boiler & can see that it would probably be better to combine this with hot water priority. Although I know this a 'how long is a piece of string' question but roughly how much would you expect weather compensating, combined with a properly sized boiler, to improve boiler efficiency by? I've also noticed that boiler manufacturers like Worcester Bosch don't seem to mention what their boilers can down modulate to. Do you know of a central source that can list such specs for a number of different boilers? Thanks 😊

  • @slygen6074
    @slygen6074 2 года назад

    You are legend my friend. So much much information! Brilliant

  • @fredericguyon1449
    @fredericguyon1449 Год назад

    That is a very interesting video with good technical details. One thing I have been wondering is that for combi boiler, the power is also based on the need for hot water flow rate. However, you only talked about the heating what about the hot water. You might want to under sized based on the heat loss calculation based then it might not provide enough hot water flow rate.

  • @3stevieb1
    @3stevieb1 Год назад

    Mind numbing but answers the real issues. Brilliant.

  • @biggig06
    @biggig06 2 года назад +2

    Hello
    Continue posting, great value content
    Learning a lot

  • @valroberts3828
    @valroberts3828 2 года назад +7

    Thanks for the very informative video. Although I'm not in the business, I needed a new boiler to replace my old Baxi solo heat only boiler open cylinder, everyone initially wanted to replace with a 30kW combi which I insisted I did not want for several reasons. Firstly I had already calculated that my heat loss was between 8 - 10kWhr, we have 2 showers at the same time and a bath and as I had solar power to my immersion heater I wanted to retain my open vent cylinder for the free hot water.
    I initially looked at a Viessmann 12kW heat only boiler, but its turn down ratio was poor 12kW max 7.2kW minimum. This would as you say in this video mean it probably would not condense for most of its operation. In the end I went with the Vogue system 15kW (the smallest they do), its minimum is 3kW which as you say again in the video less that 50% (5kW) of my heat loss which should be fine.
    The boiler has only been fitted a few days and is fine, but ASAP I will get the installer back to turn my Y-valve round and wire it to Hot Water priority, and fit a Weather compensator so I can run the CH at the lowest temperature to achieve heating requirements, and have hot water at the cylinder temperature of 65C.
    You mention in the video, that for hot water priority it may be better to have this on continuous, is that correct?
    I'm also looking at upgrading my thermostat to either Hive or Nest, but favoured Hive because my family are a little 'old school' liking the Hot Water Boost control which I think is easier to operate on the Hive than the Nest, but I guess if the system becomes Hot Water Priority continuous it matters less.
    Thanks again for the vindication regarding my thinking over the years, now we just need boiler manufacturers to manufacture smaller system boilers with a minimum turn down ratio of 5!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      Check my other video about how to do Ideal on DHWP

  • @paradoxni
    @paradoxni Год назад

    Great vid. I've a Worcester Green Star that had a Wave and compensation. Now using a Nest on/off, but was considering getting the EMS to Opentherm adapter to allow the Nest to compensate, but can't find concrete proof it works well.

  • @fraserp2377
    @fraserp2377 2 года назад +2

    This is so we'll put together and presented thanks for your efforts. I would be really interested in your opinion on gas boiler alternatives, I enjoyed your latest heat pump video (which seems to be a generally contentious subject). Given your kw discussion here, maybe an electric Combi is more practical for more homes than I first thought? Especially if they are highly efficient? Then there's bio boilers and I am sure there must be other technologies. With the price hike on gas I feel there will be a lot of interest in these subjects moving forward.

  • @rmsearle4564
    @rmsearle4564 2 года назад +24

    Excellent video. Stuff I "ought" to have known years ago.
    There's a there's a lack of technical training in the UK: even if you go on the boiler manufacturers' courses you won't get this level of understanding as they're only interested in pushing their own products (in my experience).
    Thanks for producing this.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      You are welcome !

    • @CommercialGasEngineerVideos
      @CommercialGasEngineerVideos Год назад +1

      Well said bud. There is a lack of technical training.

    • @marksmith5977
      @marksmith5977 Год назад +2

      @@CommercialGasEngineerVideos Other parts of Europe you need a degree to be a heating engineer, over here, lorry driver one week, 6 grand course, heating engineer the next.
      No offence meant to lorry drivers, without you, the pubs would run dry.

    • @CommercialGasEngineerVideos
      @CommercialGasEngineerVideos Год назад +1

      @@marksmith5977 wish there was a degree to become a gas man although I'm not sure I want a 30-40k student loan debt.

    • @marksmith5977
      @marksmith5977 Год назад +1

      @@CommercialGasEngineerVideos if it needed a degree here, I would still be driving lorries.

  • @jchidley
    @jchidley 2 года назад +2

    Very helpful information well presented. Could you do one on heat loss?

  • @jonathanarnold9409
    @jonathanarnold9409 2 года назад +1

    Have been following since you worked on my son's heating in South London. Love your work. I wish you were in Birmingham!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      thanks! not sure I will ever move to Birmingham though ;)

  • @hotbeefymcd8162
    @hotbeefymcd8162 5 месяцев назад

    I learned so much from this video, thank you

  • @Chris_at_Home
    @Chris_at_Home 2 года назад +2

    Great video. I am getting ready to put in a five zone system in a duplex I am building and this explains a lot on sizing my boiler. The structure has 6 1/2” /16.5 cm of closed cell foam in the walls and R-60 in the attic. I live in a place where I am allowed to,do my own work.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      no electrical , plumbing or gas regulations in Alaska?

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home 2 года назад +2

      @@UrbanPlumbers Yes there are and the utilities won’t connect if they see something amiss. We don’t have building inspectors or building permits. I’m not using a bank so they aren’t involved either. The plumbers want $154 an hour here.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 2 года назад +1

      @@Chris_at_Home
      Can't you do it, then get someone to sign it off after inspection?

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home 2 года назад +1

      @@johnburns4017 I am going to do it myself after getting some quotes. I can do it for less than $20,000 and all the quotes came it at about $35,000, I’m going to use those Morris Beacon heaters in the floor and under cabinets and baseboard in the basements. The garage has Pex in the slab.. The borough I live in doesn’t have construction inspections. The only thing they are concerned with is property line setbacks and how the driveway connects to the road. No banks are involved as the project is out of pocket. One half of the duplex is finished. It is only 592 sqft of living area and has a full basement. We have been heating it with a Toyo Lasar 30 for 8 winters and only use about 150 gallons of heating oil a winter. The other half is larger at 784 sqft with a full basement. There is a 24x28 garage in the middle just for the larger unit. We have been heating that for a few years now with another Toyo 30. It doesn’t keep up when it is about -20F but other than that it works great. This time of year when the sun is out we don’t need heat it in the day as there is 200 sqft of windows on the south wall.

    • @brianhof7599
      @brianhof7599 2 года назад +1

      @@Chris_at_Home America F yeah!

  • @johndevlin980
    @johndevlin980 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant!! Great explanation, I wondered where you had got to? 😂 thanks 👍🏻

  • @bradymdj
    @bradymdj Год назад

    Two plumbers wanted to increase the gas pipe size (19mm to 22mm) to support a big boiler (24kwh). This had to run around the outside of the house. I can see many houses around with these ugly copper pipes running around the house from front to back (usually where the boiler is situated) and its something I wanted to avoid. Using the principles articulated here, I managed to put a smaller boiler in and heat my home perfectly well.

  • @IMBlakeley
    @IMBlakeley Год назад

    I've currently left UK but if I come back this will be useful. I am thinking my last place was better than average, it was a large 5 bed detached approx 180m2 and the installers recommended and put in a 15KW boiler.

  • @mickinmerton8053
    @mickinmerton8053 2 года назад +2

    Great video. I wish I'd seen this video a few days prior. I've just had a Valiant boiler fitted and I have Nest controls, if I had known I would of specified a different boiler. Luckily I did resist the pressure from the heating engineer to up my boiler from 16kw to 24kw.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      Good. Not many do as people usually think that bigger is better

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      If you have a vaillant boiler, have a look at installing vaillant wiring centre (VR66 or similar) and converting the system into hot water priority with weather compensation.
      You will need to change Nest for Vaillant controls, but this will make the system more efficient and will extend the life of the components.

    • @heatfutures6681
      @heatfutures6681 2 года назад

      Vaillant controls are the best in the business, dump the Nest!

  • @davidramsay7020
    @davidramsay7020 Год назад

    Excellent video of a heating engineer that is at the top of his game.
    If I may suggest next time you explain latent heat of condensation you may wish to describe the opposite that being the ,agent heat of vaporisation, easier for people to grasp.
    For water taken from 1 degree C to 100 degrees and boiling it takes 75% of that energy to vaporise the boiling water and boil it off as steam.
    As your chart and description clearly shows the return temperature and the mass flow rate along with modulation combine to optimise boiler efficiency and reduce the steam cloud exiting one’s flue.
    I use an IR thermometer to monitor my return temperature and optimised on a flow temperature of 60 deg C which is of course dependent on my system radiators and pipe work. I fitted Honeywell WiFi thermostats on all but three radiators and also time the radiators to operate offset room by room to ensure there is always another heat sink coming on and keeping the system balanced against modulation, heat flow temp and rate.
    Great videos keep them coming your the smartest plumber on the internet.

  • @aidensholeh3696
    @aidensholeh3696 2 года назад +1

    Incredible video. Thank you.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      you are welcome, thanks for watching

  • @pumpkinhead456
    @pumpkinhead456 2 года назад +2

    Great info thanks, in some ways it has put my mind at rest. We had a 46kw vaillant ecotec plus with 3 zones and controls installed, which seemed really silly for a house needing about 27kw. However it has weather comp and modulates down to 9kw, so usually just ticks over. It's not condensing much based on your info, flow and return at 62 and 54, but otherwise sounds like it might be quite efficient. Costs us £8 a day currently for 15 hours of heating - the joys of living in a draughty old house with a small baby!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +2

      27kW heat loss - that must a 20 bedroom mansion!

    • @pumpkinhead456
      @pumpkinhead456 2 года назад +1

      @@UrbanPlumbers not quite, but it is bloody cold, I can hear the wind whistling through the floor just now... I just calculated that £8 a day is 11kw per hour of actual use. Will keep driving it down as I insulate and draught proof more and more...

  • @opentrail
    @opentrail 2 года назад

    Another great clear video. The Intergas manual for an Eco RF 30 combi boiler section 8.3.4 states that an outside temperature sensor for weather dependent regulation is ignored when used in combination with an Open Therm Room thermostat. I have both. Is this a mistake in the manual? If its important that the return temperature is below 54C then surely setting the maximum flow temperature lower until the return temperature is below 54C would make the combi even more efficient. I am surprised that Intergas only show the flow temperature and not the return temperature - would be good from a diagnostic point of view and for tuning. Are oil boilers able to modulate, or is this more specific to the properties of Gas?

  • @jacbisgood2221
    @jacbisgood2221 2 года назад +14

    This is absolute gold mate, I've been learning about this on a number of courses but you do a great job of explaining it in a way I can understand.
    More please!!

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +5

      Ohhh thank you. I am doing my best to make as many vids as possible, but I also want to keep them high quality and that takes time, which is in short supply, especially now in the cold season when I am mad busy fixing and installing boilers!

    • @cuckingfunt9353
      @cuckingfunt9353 2 года назад

      " Where are you from Mr. Knash ? " ..... " Lots of different places " .

  • @Ian-gf8id
    @Ian-gf8id Год назад +4

    I've learnt a huge amount from your excellent videos. Making sure that our boiler/water/heating are operating efficiency has become a bit of a 'thing' for me because I don't like waste, whether that be food / energy / money / time. My whole house heat loss calculations indicate that, using -3C outside / 21C inside / 1 air change per hour, we need 12KW for heating. We have a Vaillant EcoTec Plus 630 + 250L Megaflo and yesterday I called Vaillant Technical to talk through a few things. They guided me through the process to Range Rate the boiler and what did I find ? No prizes for guessing...boiler was set to 30KW. Yes it will modulate, to a degree, nevertheless it was set far too high. I've now set it to 12KW and will monitor the effect on temperatures and gas consumption. Keep up the good work 👍

    • @robi4387
      @robi4387 Год назад

      Erm. Yes and no, my friend. You may want 21oC inside but unless you run your boiler 24/7 temperature will fluctuate. This is why most programmer come set with at least two basic programmes 7-11pm 7 days for retired and home workers and M-F 6-9 and 4-11 s/s 8-12 for people who go out to work.
      Why because there is no point heating an empty house. AND it follows that when the boiler comes on it has to heat a cool house up to your 21.
      That (and needing spare to heat water on demand) is why a boiler has to have greater power than the average heat loss. That and many places saw -15 and who want a house at 9o for a week.

    • @Ian-gf8id
      @Ian-gf8id Год назад

      @@robi4387 Everything is working very effectively at 12KW. Tado (which I've been using for several years) room schedules ensures that each room is heated according to need (i.e. bedrooms pre-heated for when the children are getting up in the mornings) and is off during the day, every room is capped at 19C, we don't use water on demand (system boiler + Megaflo), flow/return 58/46C respectively. I haven't updated and analysed gas usage for a couple of months - that's on my to-do list.

  • @danielradu7386
    @danielradu7386 Год назад

    Thanks for your great insights.

  • @johnstewart1011
    @johnstewart1011 8 дней назад

    1st class video thank you, I just bought a Worcester greenstar boiler, supposed to be the highest selling boiler in the UK, they also don't support open therm, so again they want you to buy their not so good controls but their latest controller that works with weather compensation sensor (and it comes included in the box) but it can't work with smart TRV's. so if you do decide to go for Worcester you are probably better off going for 3rd party modulating controls, maybe the Drayton, wiser software which is very good using it's own mesh network to communicate with smart wireless TRV's, which doesn't rely on your internet connection to communicate with the system component's, or manual TRV's on all radiators except for possibly a towel rail for heat dissipation when the boiler turns off. but I don't know if the Drayton wiser system communicates properly with the Worcester modulating controls or just acts as an on / off switch. That's the trouble manufacturers don't want you to be able to use 3rd party controls so there's limited information available. Thanks again for this video to explain the basics.

  • @marloweye9188
    @marloweye9188 Год назад

    Well done on this information. Just a brilliant example of what I have been telling my own clients for years. A smaller Boiler working flat out is more efficient and lasts longer than an oversized one. What I didn't know until watching your video was by how much. That's an awful statistic.

  • @raimundassmalstys9042
    @raimundassmalstys9042 Год назад

    Probably the smartest engineer in this country!!!

  • @Land-of-reason
    @Land-of-reason 2 года назад +1

    Fascinating. Have you done a video on heat loss?

  • @misterbeetz
    @misterbeetz 2 года назад

    excellent video. well done!

  • @sheepbaba
    @sheepbaba 2 года назад

    Fantastic!
    What a revelation...

  • @jimroberts6456
    @jimroberts6456 8 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting video. The question I’m left with is around boiler sizing.
    If I want a shower at 10l/m @40degC (pretty standard shower conditions) this works out at about 26kW (@ 80% efficiency). This then sets the combi boiler size as ~30kW whatever the house heat loss is.
    Of course you can fit a cylinder you can get round this but isn’t this why condensing combi boilers will never run at the condensing efficiencies claimed?

  • @DGQ1Q2
    @DGQ1Q2 3 месяца назад

    Very good explained

  • @terryrigden4860
    @terryrigden4860 Год назад

    Thank you , I have learned a lot

  • @dave0smeg
    @dave0smeg 2 года назад +2

    When we moved in here, the central heating system with a boiler around 40 years old and had a hot water tank. The home was always warm despite the boiler rarely needing to run. When it developed a fault it was reolaced with a super efficient A+ rating condensing boiler. This new boiler uses 3 times as much gas as the old D rated boiler, and the house is much harder to keep warm.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +3

      there is no way any gas boiler will use 3x times the amount of gas. Unless your fitters left you with a gas leak on the system.

    • @dave0smeg
      @dave0smeg 2 года назад

      @@UrbanPlumbers Odd that our gas bill more than doubled as soon as it had been installed.
      It does seem a very wasteful boiler, running the gas through for 5 seconds before trying to ignite it, then regulating it down once it detects the heat.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +2

      @@dave0smeg the difference in efficiency between boilers cannot be more than 10-15% and it's usually in condensing boiler favour.
      It may be that your supplierhiked the prices, or you have some very serious problem with your installation or maybe a leak on the installation.
      Get a decent gas engineer to check it for you. Check heat geek map for someone in your area. (google heat geek map)

    • @richardc1983
      @richardc1983 2 года назад +1

      What's your flow temp set to?

  • @burdenstephen
    @burdenstephen 2 года назад +2

    Instant subscribe. I had my boiler replaced a year ago and I've noticed it's not been condensing and cycling often. Unfortunately I'm on s plan with new radiators which are not particularly big. The boiler is Worcester so opentherm is off the table without losing my warranty. I've been experimenting with fans under the radiators to lower the return temperature and I also want to lower the pump speed to see if that helps. According to the manual it's set to high by default. This is quite the rabbit hole...

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      Which model worcester is it? Some of them can do pDWH and also can work with modulation. Pumps are also adjustable on some WB boilers.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      Check this video on how to adjust the pump on WB boiler
      ruclips.net/video/xgXt9iYT4fw/видео.html

    • @burdenstephen
      @burdenstephen 2 года назад

      ​@@UrbanPlumbers It's a greenstar 24i Systemp ErP. When I turn the hot water on I only see the radiator symbol so I take that to mean there is no diverter kit installed. I've established the pump is set to 4 out of 0-4 available so I will try to reduce that.

  • @ianbird6997
    @ianbird6997 2 года назад

    Very interesting learnt loads 😊

  • @normanboyes4983
    @normanboyes4983 2 года назад

    Good stuff and thanks for sharing.😀👍 Did you do any the courses at the training sites you linked in the description?

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      Yes, I did both. Both are excellent.

  • @Robert-ts2ef
    @Robert-ts2ef Год назад

    Great info but if you are sizing the combinboiler to suit the heat loss example 6kw, what about requirements for the hot water, how do you size for that?

  • @Space-O-2001
    @Space-O-2001 2 года назад

    I don't know how RUclips videos are found but this video deserves a lot more views given the production quality and information communicated. Maybe a better title?

  • @yann664
    @yann664 Год назад

    Really Brilliant. Thank you

  • @billybobhouse9559
    @billybobhouse9559 2 года назад

    I was told that it's OK to oversize a combination boiler as it will provide better hot water pressure at the tap. I always thought that the boiler would modulate down during a central heating demand according to the heat output required. I didn't know that there was a limit to how much that boiler can modulate down too. Very interesting video.

    • @stephenrichards5386
      @stephenrichards5386 Год назад

      I don't know but I don't think the boiler size influences the water pressure. The big issue I have with condensing boilers is that the need for central heating influences the hot water negatively. I've always had system boilers

    • @MrMutt1960
      @MrMutt1960 Год назад

      Hi Richard, its not pressure its ,volume of hot water delivery,ie 35kw gives much more hot wtr than a 24 kw

  • @andreiturcan9692
    @andreiturcan9692 2 года назад +2

    Hi, can you confirm what is the working dT on a boiler? I have the setting temperature 70C and it fires always at 60-62C. Is that because it is oversized?

  • @paperaduck9058
    @paperaduck9058 Год назад

    very interesteing video, thanks for sharing.
    All correct, except for the confusion you made on kWh and kW.
    kWh is energy not power, boilers are rated for power (that is energy / time)

  • @runrideski6003
    @runrideski6003 2 года назад +1

    I'm from Canada and don't even have a boiler yype of heating system. Most homes around here used forced air (natural gas) heating systems. I happened upon this channel because I'm looking into upgrading my central air conditioner (30 years old) with a modern heat pump. Overall, I have found these videos extremely well done and surprisingly entertaining, given the subject matter. Very, very well done! I did note one minor error in this video related to heat loss calculations of homes, the units given in some of the graphics were kWh (energy), but I believe they should be kW (energy flux or power). This is such a common mistake - basically that the unit for power, W, already has time in the denominator - that even the pros do it ;-)

    • @pinarellolimoncello
      @pinarellolimoncello Год назад

      I wouldn't claim to be the expert but like you say power is measured in Kw, consumption/usage or loss in this case is measured in Kw/h. So average Uk home loses 6 kw/h per day, at present prices of 10p for gas (government subsidies ) that is 60 p a day over 5 winter months is about £90, doesn't sound like a massive deal but with 20 million households the figures soon add up, (not all on gas, but would just be another loss of oil or electricity which is also produced by gas)

    • @runrideski6003
      @runrideski6003 Год назад

      @@pinarellolimoncellounits of "kilowatts per hour" does not really make any sense for use in this context. Did you mean kilowatt hours (kWh)?

    • @pinarellolimoncello
      @pinarellolimoncello Год назад

      @@runrideski6003 Yes kwh, is a measure of consumption, also written in UK as Kw/h, the forward slash denoting 'per' hour ie my cooker consumes at 4 kw on for an hour ..4 kw/h. Have just looked at my utility bill, I might be out of date, there is no slash in it but it was what we wrote in physics lessons.

  • @kevinleesmith
    @kevinleesmith Год назад

    1) Does a modulating boiler only modulate down the burner, or does it also modulate the rad pump flow rate?
    2) is the modulation power (kw) set by the opentherm stat or is the flow temp set by an opentherm stat and then the boiler chooses the appropriate kW?
    3) if I use a weather compensating control like a google nest, does that automatically set the boiler output or does it set the flow temperature?

  • @TheZippyMark
    @TheZippyMark Год назад +1

    Really great video mate, you get the information across well.
    One thing though, I'd say the primary reason most boilers are oversized is that the vast majority of gas boilers in small/medium properties (that as you say require say 6-10kw) are combi boilers, and the minimum size combi is 24kw.
    I feel like the instead of the boiler plus legislation, they'd have had a much better outcome if a minimum 1:10 modulation was required from the boiler manufacturers, say.
    The other factor I have to deal with (working in London too, primarily rental properties), is that a lot of controls aren't going to make a blind bit of difference if the tenants still use them like a switch, I'd say at least 90% of the tenants I work for don't even have the timer set up, let alone optimised in any way. At least a high modulation would have an effect in all situations.

    • @claudiahamminger-stone3274
      @claudiahamminger-stone3274 Год назад

      thankfully at least Viessmann boilers now have massive turn down ratios, although I notice that no figures for fuel efficiency are ever published for a gas boiler that's running at just 7% of its rated output... Does anyone else here suspect that they're horrendously inefficient at these burn rates?

  • @dennysullivan8021
    @dennysullivan8021 2 года назад

    some modern boilers combi boilers come with a “range rating” feature in the boiler settings for the heating which means you can lower the KW your boiler uses for the heating of the property, as I agree 30kw for heating is too much for most property’s but you may want 30kw for your hot water if cold water supply’s are really good enough I can’t remember if you can range rate the hot water down as-well on boilers, but I also still agree that some engineers are not informed enough about heat loss and about this feature on boilers.If the boiler does have the range rating feature then it can still be saved from the lack of a heat loss calculation on install,prehaps a quick look in the settings on a service and then advise the customer that with a heat loss calculation there boiler could be made more efficient? Please let me know what you think and if you new about range rating ?
    Thank you for your videos they have been a very informative and I’m currently finding the work on heat pumps very helpful 👍🏻

  • @simonstones1918
    @simonstones1918 6 месяцев назад

    I love to fully understand what you’re saying in this video 😄

  • @bluenapalm123
    @bluenapalm123 4 месяца назад

    Can I sue my plumber who installed my system then?
    2x 30kW boilers.. (One disabled currently and notice my heating still works fine)
    Constantly cycling..
    Just about to replace a EV for puncturing. (Boilers less than 5 years old, serviced)
    They didn't explain Opentherm/modulating feature which my boilers have.
    Didn't explain or setup any DeltaT.
    No offer for weather compensation.
    Can I sue the plumber who has 'serviced' my boilers each year and not spot the blown EV and an empty EV without charge?
    I am learning all these things from your videos, HeatGeek and SkillBuilder predominately.. absolute game changer for my knowledge.
    Thank you for sharing and increasing the knowledge across the country.

  • @BoxerfanUK
    @BoxerfanUK 2 года назад +1

    New subscriber. Great video, thoroughly enjoyed that. Can you move to Milton Keynes please we need an engineer like you around here. 👍😀

  • @johnf3326
    @johnf3326 Год назад

    I like control. iTemp Terriers on every rad. Oversized radiators on internal walls if possible. Crono proportional thermostat with target temperature and variable preheat time. Radiators balanced by digital flow and return thermometers. Serious underfloor pipe lagging. Flow temp 50 or 55 in very cold weather

  • @rameshb9525
    @rameshb9525 2 года назад

    Question. I have a Vaillant ecofit pure 825 with the heating set to 52°c. Does the boiler fire at full blast , or modulate down?

  • @hempcacaogoji831
    @hempcacaogoji831 4 месяца назад

    One way to extend the life of a condensing boiler is by using a programmable schedule thermostat. If the thermostat set temperature changes a few times per day, then the boiler will spend more time on and more time off, as opposed to turning on/off more times.

  • @TheZaffi69
    @TheZaffi69 2 года назад

    Superb, amazing thank you very much!

  • @Peter-it2gt
    @Peter-it2gt Год назад

    Just set down the max cv temperature and flowrate of the pump if the delta T is to narrow. Moniter the return temperature keep it under

  • @mattkaramccarthy677
    @mattkaramccarthy677 2 года назад

    We have this same issue here on the west coast of Canada. Every single point you made is relevant. Fortunately for us most systems here are 4 pipe with DHW priority and piped primary/secondary so the cycling isn't as bad, but still an issue. Trying to explain range rating to contractors is like talking to a brick wall.

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад

      That’s not good. Not all of Europe is that bad though.

  • @firefighter387
    @firefighter387 2 года назад

    Please can you help I've just had a new Baxi combi fitted what temperature at the boiler should I set for the heating and for the hot water as it has two control dails

  • @kevinphillips8504
    @kevinphillips8504 2 года назад

    Great video, great engineer. Not sure if you have before but I think you’d really enjoy the commercial market

    • @UrbanPlumbers
      @UrbanPlumbers  2 года назад +1

      Commercial market ? Like charging money for the work? Never! I am a true communist mate.

  • @mjhmotorsport
    @mjhmotorsport Год назад

    Great video!

  • @christoy5429
    @christoy5429 2 года назад +4

    Excellent video, thank you! I have a question about return flow temperature. I have some radiator pipes running in a crawl space under my home. It is advisable to insulate only the flow pipes and leave the return pipes uninsulated so get the return flow temperature as low as possible, or is it still more efficient to insulate all the pipes?

    • @theoldgaffer
      @theoldgaffer 2 года назад +3

      Personally I’d say, insulate them as that’s just wasted heat. No matter how you look at it, you are heating loft space.
      Once insulated, maybe you could reduce the flow temp on your boiler?