Good morning everyone,
I wanted to ask what your house’s electricity consumption is at night when everything is quiet and sleeping, so what is running continuously?
We have a newly built house, moved in summer 2019. Our building services include underfloor heating (air-to-water heat pump), controlled mechanical ventilation (runs at full power 3 times a day for 2 hours each, then reduced), a photovoltaic system, and otherwise the usual nighttime appliances (phone charger plugged into USB outlet, e-bikes charging occasionally, 2 TVs on standby, Alexas on standby, etc.).
At night, we have a continuous consumption of about 232W (with ventilation running at reduced power and when the heat pump is not producing). I can see this in the app for the photovoltaic system. From 0:00 to 6:30 a.m. we consume about 2.8 kWh.
How about you?
Best regards
I wanted to ask what your house’s electricity consumption is at night when everything is quiet and sleeping, so what is running continuously?
We have a newly built house, moved in summer 2019. Our building services include underfloor heating (air-to-water heat pump), controlled mechanical ventilation (runs at full power 3 times a day for 2 hours each, then reduced), a photovoltaic system, and otherwise the usual nighttime appliances (phone charger plugged into USB outlet, e-bikes charging occasionally, 2 TVs on standby, Alexas on standby, etc.).
At night, we have a continuous consumption of about 232W (with ventilation running at reduced power and when the heat pump is not producing). I can see this in the app for the photovoltaic system. From 0:00 to 6:30 a.m. we consume about 2.8 kWh.
How about you?
Best regards
Tolentino schrieb:
Enthalpy heat exchanger?Bless you! No, an enthalpy what? No idea. ^^
We have a Tecalor THZ 504 and one of those Multibreeze units from Pedotherm. Does it include something like that?
You often read that without a heat exchanger, the air can become very dry during the heating season when using controlled residential ventilation. Whether that is true or not, we have simply included one and hopefully will know how it “feels to live” shortly before Christmas. But @kati1337, thank you for your report. It reinforces our feeling that we made a good investment.
S
Stadtvilla1915 Oct 2020 23:46nordanney schrieb:
11,000 kWh per year amounts to roughly 30 kWh per day. Regardless of the technology installed, including servers, air conditioning, controlled ventilation systems, etc., this is still far too much.
As a single person, I already feel like a heavy user with about 3,000 kWh. But this also includes a home office with two computers and monitors, a large waterbed, and a lot of cooking.Single yes, that fits
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