ᐅ Mechanical ventilation with heat recovery: no – explanation provided in the text.
Created on: 15 Jul 2015 00:00
G
Grym
For a long time, I was very much in favor of controlled residential ventilation, but I have now revised my opinion. First, some basic considerations:
- Modern houses are built so tightly that additional mechanical ventilation is necessary; otherwise, windows must be opened several times a day, summer and winter, for airing out
- Whether this ventilation is manual or automatic is a matter of comfort
- Whether this ventilation includes heat recovery or not is a question of economic efficiency
When considering economic efficiency, cleaning costs must be included. A reputable provider who only sells controlled residential ventilation estimated these costs at 700 EUR, with a recommended cleaning interval of at least every 5 years. However, in the demonstration house, the first cleaning was done after only 2 years because a microbial test detected contamination in the supply air exceeding the limit values (I don’t know the exact limits, but if the seller says cleaning after 2 years was necessary, I take their word for it—the company does not sell a house without controlled residential ventilation).
Depending on whether you divide the 700 EUR over 5 years or 2 years, the annual maintenance costs come to between 140 and 350 EUR.
The unit itself consumes electrical energy, approximately 250–400 kWh_el per year, which costs between 63 and 100 EUR annually.
The controlled residential ventilation system is a technical device; assuming a service life of 15 years, removal and disposal of the old unit, a new unit, and commissioning are estimated at around 5,000 EUR. This results in an annual depreciation of 333 EUR. If the ventilation system is expected to last 20 years, with disposal, new unit, and commissioning costs totaling 4,000 EUR, then depreciation is 200 EUR per year.
For new filters, maintenance, and minor repairs, I estimate a flat rate of 100 EUR.
Total annual costs in the best case scenario: 140 + 63 + 200 + 100 = 503 EUR
Total annual costs in the worst case scenario: 350 + 100 + 333 + 100 = 883 EUR
The savings effect is roughly estimated at about 2,000 kWh_thermal up to over 3,000 kWh_thermal. 2,000 kWh_thermal equate to 2,000 kWh of gas at 5.5 cents or 400–500 kWh_el at 20 cents (heat pump tariff) or 25 cents (household electricity). This results in savings of about 110 EUR (gas), 125 EUR (air-source heat pump with household electricity), or 80 EUR (ground-source heat pump with heat pump electricity).
At 3,500 EUR savings, this corresponds to 193 EUR (gas), 219 EUR (worst-case heat pump), or 140 EUR (best-case heat pump).
If you compare the best-case controlled ventilation with the worst-case heat pump, you get 503 EUR - 219 EUR = 284 EUR. The other way around is 883 EUR - 140 EUR = 743 EUR.
No matter how you look at it, controlled ventilation with heat recovery cannot even save the running costs. Therefore, in my opinion, the best system—especially to avoid hygienic problems in the house—is exhaust air modules in wet rooms combined with window rebate ventilation or an external wall air inlet. Decentralized controlled ventilation systems with heat recovery do not have such high cleaning costs, but even they would never recoup the additional cost of heat recovery. Additionally, these devices must be placed in bedrooms and living areas, which creates noise. Pure exhaust air systems without heat recovery are suitable in rooms where quiet noises are less disturbing (kitchens, toilets, utility rooms, bathrooms) and can even be switched off for hours (bathroom). Modern window rebates work without drafts and reduce sound insulation by only 1 to 2 dB. Anyone living in a quiet residential area probably doesn’t mind.
I look forward to the discussion, but please keep it relevant to the topic. I am not questioning the necessity of non-user-dependent mechanical ventilation; my focus is only on central heat recovery. Central heat recovery requires the duct system, which incurs high cleaning costs, as well as a complex technical device with limited service life and high costs (unlike a standard exhaust air module without heat recovery). Controlled ventilation without heat recovery operates without the duct system.
- Modern houses are built so tightly that additional mechanical ventilation is necessary; otherwise, windows must be opened several times a day, summer and winter, for airing out
- Whether this ventilation is manual or automatic is a matter of comfort
- Whether this ventilation includes heat recovery or not is a question of economic efficiency
When considering economic efficiency, cleaning costs must be included. A reputable provider who only sells controlled residential ventilation estimated these costs at 700 EUR, with a recommended cleaning interval of at least every 5 years. However, in the demonstration house, the first cleaning was done after only 2 years because a microbial test detected contamination in the supply air exceeding the limit values (I don’t know the exact limits, but if the seller says cleaning after 2 years was necessary, I take their word for it—the company does not sell a house without controlled residential ventilation).
Depending on whether you divide the 700 EUR over 5 years or 2 years, the annual maintenance costs come to between 140 and 350 EUR.
The unit itself consumes electrical energy, approximately 250–400 kWh_el per year, which costs between 63 and 100 EUR annually.
The controlled residential ventilation system is a technical device; assuming a service life of 15 years, removal and disposal of the old unit, a new unit, and commissioning are estimated at around 5,000 EUR. This results in an annual depreciation of 333 EUR. If the ventilation system is expected to last 20 years, with disposal, new unit, and commissioning costs totaling 4,000 EUR, then depreciation is 200 EUR per year.
For new filters, maintenance, and minor repairs, I estimate a flat rate of 100 EUR.
Total annual costs in the best case scenario: 140 + 63 + 200 + 100 = 503 EUR
Total annual costs in the worst case scenario: 350 + 100 + 333 + 100 = 883 EUR
The savings effect is roughly estimated at about 2,000 kWh_thermal up to over 3,000 kWh_thermal. 2,000 kWh_thermal equate to 2,000 kWh of gas at 5.5 cents or 400–500 kWh_el at 20 cents (heat pump tariff) or 25 cents (household electricity). This results in savings of about 110 EUR (gas), 125 EUR (air-source heat pump with household electricity), or 80 EUR (ground-source heat pump with heat pump electricity).
At 3,500 EUR savings, this corresponds to 193 EUR (gas), 219 EUR (worst-case heat pump), or 140 EUR (best-case heat pump).
If you compare the best-case controlled ventilation with the worst-case heat pump, you get 503 EUR - 219 EUR = 284 EUR. The other way around is 883 EUR - 140 EUR = 743 EUR.
No matter how you look at it, controlled ventilation with heat recovery cannot even save the running costs. Therefore, in my opinion, the best system—especially to avoid hygienic problems in the house—is exhaust air modules in wet rooms combined with window rebate ventilation or an external wall air inlet. Decentralized controlled ventilation systems with heat recovery do not have such high cleaning costs, but even they would never recoup the additional cost of heat recovery. Additionally, these devices must be placed in bedrooms and living areas, which creates noise. Pure exhaust air systems without heat recovery are suitable in rooms where quiet noises are less disturbing (kitchens, toilets, utility rooms, bathrooms) and can even be switched off for hours (bathroom). Modern window rebates work without drafts and reduce sound insulation by only 1 to 2 dB. Anyone living in a quiet residential area probably doesn’t mind.
I look forward to the discussion, but please keep it relevant to the topic. I am not questioning the necessity of non-user-dependent mechanical ventilation; my focus is only on central heat recovery. Central heat recovery requires the duct system, which incurs high cleaning costs, as well as a complex technical device with limited service life and high costs (unlike a standard exhaust air module without heat recovery). Controlled ventilation without heat recovery operates without the duct system.
ypg schrieb:
Do you even know what Wikipedia is and where its information comes from? Wikipedia is a project of the Wikimedia Foundation, a nonprofit organization (unlike former works such as Britannica or Microsoft Encarta, which come from for-profit companies). So-called "vandalism," meaning the insertion of false information or similar acts, has been virtually eliminated since the introduction of the review system. The Google algorithm also recognizes the high value of the Wikipedia website, awarding it a PageRank of 9. According to Google, Wikipedia is therefore among the roughly 200 most important websites worldwide. One reason for the discontinuation of Britannica & Co. was Wikipedia. Studies have shown that the information on Wikipedia is at least as accurate as that of Britannica, but with a much greater amount of knowledge available. Other studies show that groups tend to make more accurate decisions than individual experts. Any more questions?
So, not only links to products, meaning supposed advertisements, are prohibited but all links? But if you write xxx instead of www, then it’s allowed to "link" to obscure conspiracy theorists without actually linking? See post 56 in this thread. I just want to understand what is allowed and what is not. I thought a link to a very reliable and definitely independent source would be okay? But if ALL links are really forbidden, why not just disable linking entirely in the forum system? I didn’t even explicitly insert a link — I just included the address in the text and the forum software automatically converted it.
B
Bauexperte7 Jan 2016 00:32Grym schrieb:
Yes, I just want to know what is allowed and what isn’t. So actual links are generally not allowed, but if "WWW" is changed to "xxx", is that always permitted? The forum rules state that links are not allowed; complaints can be sent to [E-Mail]Info@Hausbau-Forum.de[/E-Mail]
I often change "WWW" to "xxx" after posts have already included links—I am not online 24 hours a day—and deleting entire posts because of links would render those posts meaningless.
You might assume I’m playing God, as the sofa mover kindly suggested. You might assume that links with "xxx" instead of the full link are allowed. No—forum rules must still be followed, and these state that links are prohibited… except when the users posting the links have been members of this forum for a longer time. This exception was introduced by the administrator on the assumption that users with longer membership can distinguish between advertising and genuine information. It can of course happen that moderators—like Yvonne recently—do not share the same assessment… but unfortunately, Yvonne also does not want to play God.
Conclusion: please follow the forum rules.
Regards, Bauexperte (after a long day)
Grym schrieb:
Yes, I just want to know what is allowed and what is not? So actual links are generally not allowed, but if a URL from the web is replaced with ‘xxx’, is that always permitted?I don’t really understand why this discussion keeps coming up. Advertising is always deleted by us, whether it includes actual URLs or ‘xxx’.
For links to informational sites, we are quite lenient and try to find a middle ground by using ‘xxx’ or something similar so that the information is not completely lost.
Many things can also be addressed without using links. For example, a brief reference to Wikipedia under the search term xyz or a quoted excerpt with a source citation from Wikipedia would have worked for you.
Links within the forum itself are useful. Therefore, the link function should not be disabled.