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RADIATORS AND HEAT PUMPS…ARE THEY GOOD PARTNERS?
The development of lower temperature heating systems, utilising renewable heating appliances – such as air source heat pumps - has given rise to a number of questions including where do components we have got to know and love over the years fit into the future of heating?
More than 90% of all heating systems in the UK rely on radiators to share the heat around the home and despite the arrival of underfloor heating, there is still a marked reluctance to use UFH upstairs in new build and it is a complex option to fit as a retrofit solution – so radiators tend to win out most of the time.
Remember radiators are poorly named! Most radiators are actually convectors – there is a small amount of radiant heat from the radiator but more than 80% of the heat is convected heat – drawn up behind the radiator where the air passes over the metal surfaces of the radiator and heats the air in the room.
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In new build housing, it’s a relatively simple solution. The key to radiators operating well in any situation is to size them properly at the outset, which involves working out heat loss calculations to achieve the necessary number of BTUs required to provide comfort heating in each room and select a radiator that provides that level of heating. In a new build home, the heating system can be designed into the home at the outset so you know the parameters in which the heating system has to operate – the method of construction, the size of the rooms, the number, type and size of doors and windows – so the heat loss calculations can be done up front and radiators sized accordingly.
In replacement heating systems for older properties there are additional issues. It’s a fact that simply replacing a boiler with a heat pump will see the existing radiators unable to provide the levels of heat needed in a home. So what is the solution – one that is cost effective and straightforward? Do we need to ditch radiators and look for alternatives?
The simple answer is no. Radiators will work well with heat pumps, but you will need to increase the size of the radiators to provide a larger metal surface area to heat the air in the room to the level required to provide comfort heating. This need not involve unsightly radiators – for one, modern radiators are aesthetically far more attractive anyway, but there are other solutions too. You can achieve the extra boost radiators need by replacing the existing single or double panel radiators with the relatively new K3 radiators that have three panels and three sets of fins – providing the additional metal surfaces you need but without increasing the radiator footprint on the wall.
Major radiator manufacturers have anticipated the significant move towards air source heat pumps in the UK and have added new, larger size radiators to their portfolio providing that option. They have also stepped up the options on the K3 radiator designs available too.
In addition, the huge popularity of vertical radiators has also offered a solution. Vertical radiators clearly have a smaller horizontal footprint than a traditional radiator, but they can be larger by design anyway – taking up floor to ceiling space, It may be more practical and more attractive to have two vertical radiators in a room than one large standard radiator which traditionally has been placed along under the main window.
Radiator manufacturers have developed a wider range of vertical radiators, adding a huge number of new designs and sizes helping to provide the larger radiators needed by the renewable heating options, but taking up the much-reduced horizontal footprint to slot into smaller wall areas in a room, to provide the levels of heat required without taking up large wall areas that will cause confrontation with furniture in the rooms. Vertical radiators can be focal points in the room, part of the décor, and fit nooks and crannies in a room which traditional horizontal radiators couldn’t do effectively.
Radiators are very much ‘fit for the future’ but as always, correct sizing will need to be undertaken to ensure that they keep the home warm and cosy. But can radiators work well with air source heat pumps? Yes they can and they already are across the UK.