TWO HUNDRED METRES vertical into bedrock!!!!! Holy Sh..
And our government expect us to use a little block of equipment (0.6m^3) on the side of the house, drawing energy out of the cold air.
TWO HUNDRED METRES vertical into bedrock!!!!! Holy Sh..
That will be a GROUND source heat pump. Not the air source which is the common one. There’s a big difference.
Thanks Jansman. I know the difference that you mean. Air source seems to be the expensive 'cheap option'.jansman wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 11:38 amThat will be a GROUND source heat pump. Not the air source which is the common one. There’s a big difference.
I don't know of the terminology but Geo = Earth(ground). Thermal=HotFrnc wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:12 pm Ground Source Heat Pumps are not geothermal.
Geothermal involves holes 500 to 2,500 metres deep! Here, temperatrures can reach 6,000°C. Water goes in one hole and comes out of another as sperheated steam. Steam drives turbines that generate electricity. Geothermal tends to be industrial scale.
I just explained the difference. They are completely different. A carpet of pipes under your lawn a few metres down would be for a GSHP. The alternative is a deeper hole, but it won't be geothermal.jennyjj01 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:59 pmI don't know of the terminology but Geo = Earth(ground). Thermal=HotFrnc wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:12 pm Ground Source Heat Pumps are not geothermal.
Geothermal involves holes 500 to 2,500 metres deep! Here, temperatrures can reach 6,000°C. Water goes in one hole and comes out of another as sperheated steam. Steam drives turbines that generate electricity. Geothermal tends to be industrial scale.
I think of GSHP as a subset of Geo-thermal and both ASHP and GSHP as subsets of HP
A hole 200m deep was pretty unthinkable in a domestic setting.
>500m or 2500m deep, I'd be thinking of power station industrial scale.
IF I ever had geothermal, then I'd expect a carpet of pipes under my lawn a few metre down.... Which wouldn't work because a) we have a big tree and b) There's LOTS of compacted rubble.
Sorry. I wasn't disagreeing and maybe... Probably... I misinterpreted your post. Being pragmatic, I see the difference as geothermal taps into the Hot deep body of the earth where temp is already high, compared to GSHP which does similar but from cool earth where the energy has to be pumped out by a heat pump. With GSHP, as heat is drawn from the subsoil, so that heat energy is replenished by heat conducted upwards from deeper down. Sort of like the difference between a gushing full oil well and a depleted one where they have to push sea water down to draw the oil out. So I see GSHP as a sort of geothermal in that both draw heat energy from the ground. Please don't be offended by my pragmatism or even by my contrarianismFrnc wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 1:39 pmI just explained the difference. They are completely different. A carpet of pipes under your lawn a few metres down would be for a GSHP. The alternative is a deeper hole, but it won't be geothermal.jennyjj01 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:59 pmI don't know of the terminology but Geo = Earth(ground). Thermal=HotFrnc wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:12 pm Ground Source Heat Pumps are not geothermal.
Geothermal involves holes 500 to 2,500 metres deep! Here, temperatrures can reach 6,000°C. Water goes in one hole and comes out of another as sperheated steam. Steam drives turbines that generate electricity. Geothermal tends to be industrial scale.
I think of GSHP as a subset of Geo-thermal and both ASHP and GSHP as subsets of HP
A hole 200m deep was pretty unthinkable in a domestic setting.
>500m or 2500m deep, I'd be thinking of power station industrial scale.
IF I ever had geothermal, then I'd expect a carpet of pipes under my lawn a few metre down.... Which wouldn't work because a) we have a big tree and b) There's LOTS of compacted rubble.
At 500 to 2,500m (geothermal) it would be industrial, yes, that is what I said.
To be honest, there are overlaps in the terminology, I was simplifying a bit to show the main distinction. For example some people call GSHPs 'geothermal heat pumps'. There is also geothermal used for direct hot water heating. And there is Low Temperature Geothermal energy.jennyjj01 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 4:04 pmSorry. I wasn't disagreeing and maybe... Probably... I misinterpreted your post. Being pragmatic, I see the difference as geothermal taps into the Hot deep body of the earth where temp is already high, compared to GSHP which does similar but from cool earth where the energy has to be pumped out by a heat pump. With GSHP, as heat is drawn from the subsoil, so that heat energy is replenished by heat conducted upwards from deeper down. Sort of like the difference between a gushing full oil well and a depleted one where they have to push sea water down to draw the oil out. So I see GSHP as a sort of geothermal in that both draw heat energy from the ground. Please don't be offended by my pragmatism or even by my contrarianismFrnc wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 1:39 pmI just explained the difference. They are completely different. A carpet of pipes under your lawn a few metres down would be for a GSHP. The alternative is a deeper hole, but it won't be geothermal.jennyjj01 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:59 pm I don't know of the terminology but Geo = Earth(ground). Thermal=Hot
I think of GSHP as a subset of Geo-thermal and both ASHP and GSHP as subsets of HP
A hole 200m deep was pretty unthinkable in a domestic setting.
>500m or 2500m deep, I'd be thinking of power station industrial scale.
IF I ever had geothermal, then I'd expect a carpet of pipes under my lawn a few metre down.... Which wouldn't work because a) we have a big tree and b) There's LOTS of compacted rubble.
At 500 to 2,500m (geothermal) it would be industrial, yes, that is what I said.