Heating source in rental
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1 | Does a 5.5kw heatpump meet new healthy homes standard? I know this also depends on size of living room ... of the top of my head I think the room would be around 30m2 kungfu3 - 2020-11-28 20:15:00 |
2 | There's a lot more information than that needed. luteba - 2020-11-28 20:20:00 |
3 | kungfu3 wrote:
Depends if the house is open plan catwoman1974 - 2020-11-29 16:42:00 |
4 | the company who are installing ours recommended the size. cave-man22 - 2020-11-29 19:25:00 |
5 | Our 5-5 ke is useless in our 30m2 lounge dinner with double glazing , insulation and west facing in Wellington. Your mileage may vary lissie - 2020-11-29 20:07:00 |
6 | We have an 8kw floor mounted heat pump in about a 80 m2 room and it heats it very easily. It only has 1982 wall insulation and single glazing with aluminium windows, so 5.5kw should be ample I would have thought, but it depends on the brand of the heat pump I think. We have a Fujitsu and are in Christchurch, so not terribly warm, but not terribly cold either. tygertung - 2020-11-30 06:28:00 |
7 | tygertung wrote:
With a potential $4k penalty for not meeting the HHS you actually want to 'know'. desi1969 - 2020-11-30 11:40:00 |
8 | Oversized is better for efficiency loose.unit8 - 2020-11-30 12:54:00 |
9 | desi1969 wrote:
So use the calculator linked to above. tygertung - 2020-11-30 13:32:00 |
10 | tygertung wrote:
Agreed - post Number 2 was great. desi1969 - 2020-11-30 13:40:00 |
11 | loose.unit8 wrote: tweake - 2020-11-30 19:18:00 |
12 | tweake wrote:
Hmm interesting, thanks loose.unit8 - 2020-12-01 10:24:00 |
13 | Best to go through the tool that Luteba has posted. From what I understand, it includes the entire enclosed area. So total area will include the Dining, Kitchen, etc, if it is adjoining and open to the Living area. Property manager went through and got an external assessor in to do it on my behalf (complimentary, paid for by the PM) Discovered that the Heat Pump the builder installed Did Not meet the healthy home requirements (as laid out as a condition of the Sales and Purchase agreement). Now I'm busy trying to chase the builder up. Edited by cognition at 10:54 am, Tue 1 Dec cognition - 2020-12-01 10:46:00 |
14 | loose.unit8 wrote:
actually in a way you where sort of right but not anything to do with efficiency. if i remember right the calc used doesn't take into account the house air leakage rates. so in older homes (which leak more air) your better to oversize it a bit because the calc is undersizing it. how much to oversize i'm not sure on. Edited by tweake at 6:36 pm, Tue 1 Dec tweake - 2020-12-01 18:35:00 |
15 | As post 2 says, this is a requirement by law, no matter what builders and heat pump installers say. You measure every wall in your lounge(WxH) and any adjoining areas not closed off by a door and all glass areas. You input all this into the calculator and it will tell you the size heatpump you need.Open fireplaces do not count. You have to install a fixed thermostatically controlled heating device to the required KW. blueviking - 2020-12-01 21:22:00 |
16 | As usual tweake is commenting on something he knows nothing about. The calculator adjusts on the year the house was built,(minimum insulation requirements for the year) the insulation(ceiling, wall and underfloor) and whether windows are double glazed or not. blueviking - 2020-12-01 21:28:00 |
17 | The new legislation is you have to supply all new tenants with a 7 page document explaining all the healthy homes requirements met or not met in your rental property, explaining why they are not met. Rangehoods venting to the outside and bathroom extractor fans venting to the outside with minimal l/p/s.No of smoke alarms in the house.Gmb's installed. blueviking - 2020-12-01 21:40:00 |
18 | blueviking wrote: Sounds like at least an extra $20pw in rent to cover that paper work. pcle - 2020-12-02 08:28:00 |
19 | How would you get on completing this paper work with an 8 year old, fully Clean Air compliant Masport log-burner? leisurecraft - 2020-12-02 12:33:00 |
20 | Go to the website that luteba put up, the are exclusions and other details. Just work it out. msigg - 2020-12-02 17:08:00 |
21 | blueviking wrote: i just had a quick look as i ran through a couple of the calculators 1-2 years ago. the look is different and i see one question different (that i can recall). it may have been changed or i just can't remember. tweake - 2020-12-02 17:57:00 |
22 | Leisure, If you can provide the paperwork that states the output in KW, then there is an exemption, as long as the tnt uses it. You may or may not be required to supply all wood(I can see this coming in in the future)So best to measure your room and install the smallest heatpump allowable.Probably about the same price as supplying somewhere to store their firewood to keep dry. blueviking - 2020-12-04 07:38:00 |
23 | And just for fun, all you landlords need to read this... blueviking - 2020-12-04 07:45:00 |
24 | Thanks Blueviking. There is already a shed for the dry storage of firewood. I will look into getting an exemption. This clean-air approved log burner is an efficient heating source and heats the lounge (and the entire house) better than any heat pump. It would be madness, having to replace it with a heat pump. leisurecraft - 2020-12-04 13:47:00 |