Heat Pump

  • Thread starter Thread starter jrb
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Yep as @Citizen of Legoland said you need an EPC. Just had a look at mine and it’s 17k without the discount, 9.5k with the discount and will save about £330 per year so it’s still around 29 yrs to break even.

They need to make it cheaper so the break even is around 8-10yrs, which pushing it, is about the life of a good combi boiler.
I’ve got an EPC, hence why I didn’t understand why I wouldn’t get the discount. But as you and others have posted, the returns over such a long period of time aren’t worth the expensive initial outlay. Even if I wanted to buy a heat pump those kind of returns would put me off buying a heat pump. I’d rather buy solar panels as most of my money goes on electricity, not on gas.
 
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Just been on Heat Geek, typed in my address, amended my property details from 2 bathrooms to 1 bathroom and got a clear and well laid out instant quote for a heat pump, installation, heat Geek Assurance and yearly saving. You can’t fault that as there’s no hidden extras or a person doing they survey and coming up with a figure off the top of their head.

View attachment 103541


According to Heat Geek, my property isn’ eligible for a BUS grant. Out of interest, I’d like to find out why.


Look at getting an air-air heat pump to heat your house and a heat pump water heater for your hot water. Installation is minimal, and you could come in under £7500 for the lot.

Yep as @Citizen of Legoland said you need an EPC. Just had a look at mine and it’s 17k without the discount, 9.5k with the discount and will save about £330 per year so it’s still around 29 yrs to break even.

They need to make it cheaper so the break even is around 8-10yrs, which pushing it, is about the life of a good combi boiler.
F'kin 'ell! How big is your house!? Seriously, I got a quote in Sweden for a bore hole thermal pump with installation for about 13K (at 25% VAT) so there's a lot of mark up in that price.

An air-water pump will last about 10-15 years, so the price needs to come down to make it viable.
 
Look at getting an air-air heat pump to heat your house and a heat pump water heater for your hot water. Installation is minimal, and you could come in under £7500 for the lot.


F'kin 'ell! How big is your house!? Seriously, I got a quote in Sweden for a bore hole thermal pump with installation for about 13K (at 25% VAT) so there's a lot of mark up in that price.

An air-water pump will last about 10-15 years, so the price needs to come down to make it viable.
Well according to the site about 245 sq m, I think it gets this from the EPC cert. Probably would be described as a large family home.

Quotes for ground sourced heat pumps, which i have looked into in the UK, are astronomical.
 
Look at getting an air-air heat pump to heat your house and a heat pump water heater for your hot water. Installation is minimal, and you could come in under £7500 for the lot.


F'kin 'ell! How big is your house!? Seriously, I got a quote in Sweden for a bore hole thermal pump with installation for about 13K (at 25% VAT) so there's a lot of mark up in that price.

An air-water pump will last about 10-15 years, so the price needs to come down to make it viable.

Heat Geeks quoted me an estimated £12,371 for a heat Pump installation.

Octopus Energy confirmed a fixed price quote of £3,288 for a heat pump installation.

There’s something going on with heat pump installation prices. 2 companies can’t be £9000 apart, can they?

Octopus Energy may have included the Government heat Pump grant of £7,500, whilst Heat Geeks definitely didn’t?
 
Straight forward question. Is this a good deal?

Octopus Energy.

Based on available property information, we think a 7-panel system with A Giv-Energy 5.2kWh Battery would be a great fit for your home

Your quote includes everything you need to begin generating your own clean, green electrons at home, and save money on your energy bills in the process!

  • 7x JA Solar 435w panels
  • A Giv-Energy 5.2kWh Battery
  • A Giv-Energy Hybrid Inverter
  • Installation on a Single Aspect roof
  • Bird-Netting as standard
  • All electrical components required to complete the install
  • All scaffolding, delivery and labour costs
£8.199. Includes the £1000 discount.

PS. I need to look into the annual savings.
 
They will need to be in every home by 2050 to meet the net zero target.

No other way bar some Passivehaus stuff with solar and an element near the venation. Insulate Britain didn't know much about it.
 
Seeing all that shite pipe work in the garage has put me off. Think I’ll upgrade my 15 yo gas boiler before they get banned rather than all that.

Legacy boilers!

(The funny thing is that is the actual technical term now, to get an exemption from the ban)
 
So.

From the start of July to the beginning of December, my latest bill is due this week, I have spent £390 on electricity. The next 3 winter electricity bills will be in the region of £270, give or take? The electricity bills should start coming down after that as days are lighter and warmer. There is going to be an energy price drop in April. I’ve also bought a more energy efficient washing machine and heat pump tumble dryer. After that the next 3 bills go into spring and summer. £150 give or take? Guessing, the total electricity bill for the year could be in the region of £810. If £810 was replicated every year it would take me 10 years to get my solar panel quote of £8100 back. I haven’t included any spare electricity going back to the national grid, which is 15p kWh. Which could be in £1+ a day? £30 a month? £360 a year, depending on the autumn and winter months. £3600 over 10 years. All the figures are hypothetical over the 10 year period.
 
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So.

From the start of July to the beginning of December, my latest bill is due this week, I have spent £390 on electricity. The next 3 winter electricity bills will be in the region of £270, give or take? The electricity bills should start coming down after that as days are lighter and warmer. There is going to be an energy price drop in April. I’ve also bought a more energy efficient washing machine and heat pump tumble dryer. After that the next 3 bills go into spring and summer. £150 give or take? Guessing, the total electricity bill for the year could be in the region of £810. If £810 was replicated every year it would take me 10 years to get my solar panel quote of £8100 back. I haven’t included any spare electricity going back to the national grid, which is 15p kWh.
Bit better payback that the heat pump, but you are assuming you generate enough in the summer to offset the use in the winter. When I did mine it was nearer to 13yrs payback but we do have one electric car (waiting to be called a **** by @Mazzarelli's Swiss Cheese )now so it may be a bit better. Solar panels should last a good 15-20yrs albeit that they do degrade slightly over time. Battery at 10yrs might be down to 80% max capacity but still useful.
 
Bit better payback that the heat pump, but you are assuming you generate enough in the summer to offset the use in the winter. When I did mine it was nearer to 13yrs payback but we do have one electric car (waiting to be called a **** by @Mazzarelli's Swiss Cheese )now so it may be a bit better. Solar panels should last a good 15-20yrs albeit that they do degrade slightly over time. Battery at 10yrs might be down to 80% max capacity but still useful.

Would you do it, Kompany Car?

The only issue is, I’d have to take out a loan. That’s an extra £800-£1000. :-(

Also. Battery VAT is going to be 0% from February.
 
So.

From the start of July to the beginning of December, my latest bill is due this week, I have spent £390 on electricity. The next 3 winter electricity bills will be in the region of £270, give or take? The electricity bills should start coming down after that as days are lighter and warmer. There is going to be an energy price drop in April. I’ve also bought a more energy efficient washing machine and heat pump tumble dryer. After that the next 3 bills go into spring and summer. £150 give or take? Guessing, the total electricity bill for the year could be in the region of £810. If £810 was replicated every year it would take me 10 years to get my solar panel quote of £8100 back. I haven’t included any spare electricity going back to the national grid, which is 15p kWh. Which could be in £1+ a day? £30 a month? £360 a year, depending on the autumn and winter months. £3600 over 10 years. All the figures are hypothetical over the 10 year period.
Enigma_(crittografia)_-_Museo_scienza_e_tecnologia_Milano.jpg
Hang fire whilst I crank it up - sooooooooo, this a positive news story or the other kind? :-)
 
Just been thinking about a heat pump again after seeing the Government are now giving grants of up to £7,500 towards a heat pump and heat pump installation. Ran it through Octopus Energy and I’m eligible for the full grant. I’m going to get a quote for a heat pump and solar panels from Octopus Energy. Once I’ve got the quote I’m going to sit down and crunch the numbers, cost > savings > returns = £

4EE14C28-E044-42B2-AD90-0443948E9029.jpeg
 
Just been thinking about a heat pump again after seeing the Government are now giving grants of up to £7,500 towards a heat pump and heat pump installation. Ran it through Octopus Energy and I’m eligible for the full grant. I’m going to get a quote for a heat pump and solar panels from Octopus Energy. Once I’ve got the quote I’m going to sit down and crunch the numbers, cost > savings > returns = £

View attachment 122872
There’s a new generation of heat pumps. The first was great except that they did not work if the air temp was zero or below. Also there is a question of the resulting flow temp being too low. You need to check performance of the system suggested.
I’m a late adopter of new tech, as weaknesses are solved. Switching to electricity soon to replace my gas lighting.
 
Straight forward question. Is this a good deal?

Octopus Energy.

Based on available property information, we think a 7-panel system with A Giv-Energy 5.2kWh Battery would be a great fit for your home

Your quote includes everything you need to begin generating your own clean, green electrons at home, and save money on your energy bills in the process!

  • 7x JA Solar 435w panels
  • A Giv-Energy 5.2kWh Battery
  • A Giv-Energy Hybrid Inverter
  • Installation on a Single Aspect roof
  • Bird-Netting as standard
  • All electrical components required to complete the install
  • All scaffolding, delivery and labour costs
£8.199. Includes the £1000 discount.

PS. I need to look into the annual savings.
annual bill savings with solar PV panels on your roof are estimated at £300-400 ?
 

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