Good! I’ve been looking at the forecast all week, big load in the washing machine just spinning, ready to hang outside.Good drying day today chaps!
Yes I'd agreed with that. I have a cheap heater next to my desk for when I wfh and the rest are out. A three minute blast ever so often takes the chill offthe thinking is sound, for targeted heating in a room or two instead of heating whole house up to a level.
wouldnt pay that much though. get a simple fan heater from Argos or supermarkets for half that. do you need the timer and other gubbins?
We're on the trial scheme with OVO, which runs for 5 months so £20 per month if you hit the target.Might be worth people keeping an eye out for the National Grid scheme I heard discussed on 5Live this morning. In short, consumers will be incentivised to reduce consumption during the peak hours of 4-7pm on certain days through the winter and could save up to £100 on their bills as a result.
Sounds like most major suppliers will be taking part, although you'll need a smart meter.
Some details here: https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/national-grid-energy-bill-discounts-blackouts-084608114.html
Are you actively trying to minimise consumption during those hours?We're on the trial scheme with OVO, which runs for 5 months so £20 per month if you hit the target.
If we use less than 12.5% of our total daily electricity consumption at peak times, (4pm to 7pm, Monday to Friday) we'll get a £20 credit added to our bill. This runs until the end of March, offering up to a maximum of £100 credit.
They look at our average electricity usage for the whole month, so if we use more than this target at peak times, it will be balanced out by days when we might use less.
Three days in, and It's not looking good so far....
We have shift work patterns in the house, I've tried but difficult to get family members to understand and/or conform.Are you actively trying to minimise consumption during those hours?
you will always have heat out the flue. condensing boilers make this less and flow control lower still, wont eliminate it though.I still have heat coming out of the boiler flue - central heating boiler temp is set at 60, do I continue turning it down?
This was covered by experts in Sept.I still have heat coming out of the boiler flue - central heating boiler temp is set at 60, do I continue turning it down?
Ok thanks, very useful. Will turn it down to 55 and see what happens.This was covered by experts in Sept.
Turning down combi boiler flow (exit) temperatures to:
H/W - just enough to meet your requirements from taps/shower.
C/W - to 55c.
Will mean that largely just water vapour and carbon dioxide exit the flue.
One of the helpful youtube videos explained that if you see white steam, heat is being lost, the flow temperatures are set too high.
If it works as you describe, another way to hit your target is if you increase your consumption in off peak hours so much that 4-7PM makes up only 12.5% of total usage, I do not advise this course of action.We're on the trial scheme with OVO, which runs for 5 months so £20 per month if you hit the target.
If we use less than 12.5% of our total daily electricity consumption at peak times, (4pm to 7pm, Monday to Friday) we'll get a £20 credit added to our bill. This runs until the end of March, offering up to a maximum of £100 credit.
They look at our average electricity usage for the whole month, so if we use more than this target at peak times, it will be balanced out by days when we might use less.
Three days in, and It's not looking good so far....
Thought about that, I could force our solar battery to charge, before this 'money saving' 16:00 start time, will need to do some sums.If it works as you describe, another way to hit your target is if you increase your consumption in off peak hours so much that 4-7PM makes up only 12.5% of total usage, I do not advise this course of action.
So now we have been away for a few days I’m seeing that our phantom load is running at 3.3kwh per day. That’s one fridge freezer, one chest freezer, one sky q box, one security camera, one google device and two led lights that come on for four hours in the evening. Everything else is switched off at the wall, even the oven. I know the chest freezer is using about 0.8 kWh per day based on the info that came with it so I reckon the fridge freezer is at least the same and the sky box around 0.5 kWh based on what I’ve read. Still seems high to me. Maybe the fridge freezer isn’t as efficient as my estimate.Assuming you have gas for heating and/or water, it feels to me as though there's something amiss there, at least compared to our own usage.
We were away for four weeks over July-August and our usage was 2.5kWh per day over that time. Stuff that would still have been on...
- Fridge freezer
- Fish tank heat and light. It's a small tank and wouldn't have needed much heat, if any, during the hot summer period
- Router
- BT smart thingummy that goes with the new fast router
- The smart meter monitor
None of these would use much at all, with the likely exception of the fridge freezer which is pretty old. We bought it second-hand when we moved back down from Somerset, where we had an integrated appliance, and needed something to tide us over in a short-term rental. That was nearly 10 years ago now. We've kept it because it just felt sensible to not get rid of something that was working and functional. Very possibly not now.
We've managed to reduce by 4kWh per day from October 2021 to October 2022. One of the biggest culprits would have been the wall lights we inherited in the lounge of our house. Three fittings with two bulbs in each, so six bulbs at 42 watts meaning 252 watts per hour. On long dark winter days, these would have been running up a fair chunk of usage alone. Now we leave them off unless we really need bright light, and use a single standard lamp with a 14.5 watt bulb.