Showing posts with label Energy Efficiency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy Efficiency. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

Changes to ASHRAE Ventilation Standard

Isaac Asimov wrote "Science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom." We have seen this play out countless times in residential construction: double pane windows with seals that failed within a few years creating 'obscurred glass', vapor barriers installed on the wrong side of the wall assembly causing rot to form, solar collectors on the roof that froze in winter, flexible polybutylene piping with only two fittings per line that still failed at the fitting, to name a few.  We are seeing it today in the form of airtight construction with little or no ventilation. Science has told us that building airtight homes will dramatically decrease heating and cooling costs, saving thousands over the life of a building. Compelling argument. The trouble is that many builders are not making the corollary adjustment: providing adequate planned ventilation.

The American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) first published Standard 62.2:Ventilation and Acceptable Indoor Air Quality in Low-Rise Residential Buildings in 2003. The standard was published again in 2004 and every three years since then. It is a very readable and informative document that contains not only the recommendations of the Standard, but also a good description of ventilation and its importance in residential buildings. The Standard addresses (and describes) three primary requirements for ventilation. These are "whole-building", or dilution, ventilation; spot ventilation for removal of moisture and contaminants from specific rooms (bathroom, kitchen) or areas that tend to generate or contain problem quality air; and finally "source control". This last one is somewhat different than the prior two since it attempts to limit the sources of  air contaminants rather than remove them once in the air. The intent of ASHRAE is to have the standard adopted by building codes, not used as an educational tool. You may find it interesting to read their companion ASHRAE Guideline 24-2008 if you are looking for more explanation.

Both the 2004 and 2007 editions contained few changes, but the 2013 edition has a fairly significant change. The standard, acknowledging that homes are now being built universally tighter than in 2004, has eliminated an assumed air leakage rate of 2 cubic feet per minute (cfm) per 100 square feet of living space. To compensate for this loss of leakiness, the Standard increased the recommended ventilation rate from 7.5 cfm per person plus .01cfm per square foot to 7.5 cfm per person plus .03 cfm per square foot. The effect is to roughly double the recommended ventilation rate! For example, consider a family of four living in a 2500 square foot home. The old recommendation for ventilation was

 7.5 cfm/person * 4 people + .01 cfm * 2500 ft2 = 55 cfm.

The new recommendation is

 7.5 cfm/person * 4 people + .03 cfm * 2500 ft2 = 105 cfm.

This near doubling is seemingly in response to elimination of a 2 cfm leak assumption. In the example above, 2cfm of unintended ventilation were eliminated and 50 cfm were added. That's a big jump! This should be of particular note to people who are planning on using the standard to determine AMOUNT of ventilation and using negative pressure (exhaust only) as the METHOD of ventilation. It will be hard to meet the standard with exhaust only; you will likely be kept awake at night by the whistling of the make up air screaming through the small leaks in your building envelope. You will likely have such a large negative pressure that you may not be able to open your outward swinging doors; small birds may get sucked against the weather stripping of your windows as they try to fly by; you may raise the water table in your community..............I could go on with the hyperbole, but you probably get the point: you will have to maintain a large negative pressure to reach the recommended flow rate (CFM).

The new ventilation recommendations are a good argument for a balanced ventilation system, with a controlled inlet and outlet. A great way to achieve this is with a Heat Recovery Ventilator (HRV) or Energy Recovery Ventilator (ERV), formerly known as air to air heat exchangers. This type of system, coupled with kitchen and bath fans for spot ventilation, will easily be able to meet the standard and provide fresh air from a reliable location outside the house. 

ASHRAEs Standard 62.2 is not yet a part of the building code (the International Residential Code has not adopted it), so remains just a recommendation for now. However, inadequate ventilation results in poor indoor air quality (IAQ) where contaminants are allowed to reach unhealthy concentrations and relative humidity levels soar allowing mold to thrive. A thorough approach to ventilation examines the size and occupancy of the building to establish an acceptable flow rate as well as monitoring indoor air quality such as relative humidity and carbon monoxide to measure adequacy.
 

Friday, January 6, 2012

Living Simply Class at Shelter

We've written about Ben Tipton previously on the Shelter Build blog. Four years ago, the Tipton family and Shelter built a home in Woolwich, Maine. The Tipton's goal was to down size and live as energy efficiently as possible. You can read more about the Tipton's home and their personal journey on their blog: Simple Living.


Ben is returning to his blog, and he is also offering a class at Shelter on February 18th titled, "Living More Simply." The simple goal Ben would like to impart is...

Mindfulness.

How can we achieve mindfulness? How can we reduce the noise and stress in our lives? To begin, Ben asks us to BREATHE..... One simple act that can help us push the pause button on our busy lives. Slow down and walk at 1/3 your normal speed and get to see more along this path we call life.

In Ben's six-hour workshop he'll help you think about slowing down and enjoying every moment more fully. Come learn a new skill, explore ways you can simplify your life, connect with others and learn techniques for managing stress through simple living. We will carve a wooden spoon, make elderberry syrup, share stories, walk in the woods, and slow down while discussing ways to simplify your life while still being engaged in our modern world.

Ben Tipton has been trying to simplify his life and has been investigating the impact of simple living on our health. With over 16 years experience as a physician assistant he has seen the direct impact a stress-filled life can have and has sought ways to help heal by slowing down. His education has been supported by standing on the shoulders of really smart people, through which he has acquired many skills of yesterday and today. He currently grows his own food with the help of his wife, two kids, a dog, 8 chickens and a rabbit on the rocky clay filled soils along the coast of Maine. While he does not consider himself an expert, he employs the mindset of "try something and see what works."

Register for the Living More Simply class online at Shelter.

Tuition is $45 per person. The class will be held on the Shelter Campus, February 18, 2012 from 9:00am to 1:00pm. Lunch will be provided and each student will receive a traditional Murphy's Carving Knife and a blank of wood for carving.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Structural Insulated Panels (SIPs) Make Good Sense

When we talk about the buildings we make at Shelter, one of the most frequently asked questions is, "What is a SIP?"

Stacks of SIPs before installation
The first time I saw a Structural Insulated Panel (SIP), I thought it looked like an ice cream sandwich. That's essentially how a SIP is made: EPS (expanded polystyrene) insulation laminated between sheets of OSB (oriented strand board). SIPs are not new to the homebuilding market. Fine Homebuilding notes that SIPs have been used since the 1940s.

Why do homebuilders, including Shelter, use SIPs in construction? As Fine Homebuilding succinctly points out, "[s]tructural insulated panels make stronger homes that go up faster and reduce energy bills dramatically."

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

In the Doghouse

By Gaius Hennin, P.E.


We have been installing structural insulated panels (SIPs) for years (24 to be exact). When we first started, we would cut the window and door openings on site. At the end of each job, the customer would usually ask "What can I do with all these pieces?" referring to the large stack of window cutouts. Somewhat tongue-in-cheek, I'd reply that the scraps would make a heck of a doghouse.

Well, Amy and I now have three sons (6, 11, and 12), and I am always looking for a good project that the four of us can work on that allows me to impart the vast knowledge of carpentry my Dad has shared with me. Last spring I had a pile of SIP scraps taking up valuable real estate in our shop, and I found myself saying, "What can I do with all these pieces?" Then I found myself thinking "These scraps would make a heck of a doghouse."

A project was born.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Energy Audit of a Shelter Home - Part II

By Gaius Hennin, P.E.
 
Last month on this blog, we shared with ShelterBuild readers details of a free class Shelter recently hosted on the subject of energy audits and energy efficient homes. Aaron Despres from Energy Solutions For Maine and Up-Country Building Inspectors, Inc. explained to the class three levels of energy audits you might receive from a commercial vendor and what you might expect from each.

Tipton Home
In this post, we'll share the results of an energy audit Aaron performed on the Tipton home, which we've mentioned previously on this blog. (You can also read about the Tipton's home and their goal of building a near net-zero home on their blog, Simple Living, where they describe the process of designing and building their home as well as the energy performance of the house.)

Shelter Design Build was responsible for the shell of the Tipton's home including the timber frame and structural insulated panel enclosure (from R-Control), Marvin doors and windows, and McElroy hidden fastener metal roof.

Aaron’s audit started with an exterior inspection of the home: checking the orientation of the home, type of siding, type of foundation (and lack or presence of insulation on foundation wall), roofing type and lastly checking for any indications of obvious envelope leakage. There is no such thing as a house built too tight, only inadequate ventilation.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Energy Audit of a Shelter Home - Part I

By Gaius Hennin, P.E.
 
Shelter recently hosted a class taught by Aaron Despres from Energy Solutions For Maine and Up-Country Building Inspectors, Inc. Aaron is a native of Harpswell, Maine and holds a Masters degree in Geology. He is certified as a Building Analyst Professional by the Building Performance Institute, #4380 * ASHI Associate, # 248862 * Member of MeCHIPS













In addition to the class, Aaron performed an energy audit of the Tipton home, which we've mentioned previously on our blog. (You can also read about the Tipton's home and their goal of building a near net-zero home on their blog, Simple Living, where they describe the process of designing and building their home as well as the energy performance of the house.)

Shelter Design Build was responsible for the shell of the Tipton's home including the timber frame and structural insulated panel enclosure (from R-Control), Marvin doors and windows, and McElroy hidden fastener metal roof.

In this first installment, we'll describe Aaron's class, and in a later post, we'll share the results of Aaron's energy audit of the Tipton home.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Buy a Woodstove Now, Before the Tax Credit Expires

For the next week on Shelter Blog, we're posting new Holiday Gift Idea entries and republishing entries from last year. Keep an eye on our site for great gift ideas.

Now is the time to buy a woodstove. The Federal tax credit for "biomass" stoves expires at the end of this month (December 2010). Shelter sells quality Vermont Castings stoves, and they are truly things of beauty. We can help you select a wood stove that qualifies for the tax credit (a full list of Vermont Castings stoves that qualify can be found here), and we are happy to help you find the right size and type of stove for your home.

The tax credit is for 30% of the cost (installation included) of the biomass fuel stove used for heat or heating water, up to $1500 . You can purchase more than one stove and receive credit on both of them -- up to $1500. The stoves must have a thermal efficiency rating of at least 75% as measured using a lower heating value.

Biomass is not a word you see too often. The law defines "biomass fuel" as any plant-derived fuel available on a renewable or recurring basis, including agricultural crops and trees, wood, wood waste and residues (including wood pellets), plants (including aquatic plants), grasses, residues, and fibers.

For more information about wood stoves, energy efficiency, or the Federal tax credit, read our blog posts on energy efficiency, contact us by phone at (207-442-7938) or email for additional information.


Need more gift ideas? Send us an email at info@shelterinstitute.com or check back soon. We'll post more gift ideas from Shelter.


Friday, December 17, 2010

Gift Ideas for the Woodstove Family

For the next week on Shelter Blog, we're posting new Holiday Gift Idea entries and republishing entries from last year. Keep an eye on our site for great gift ideas.

The woodstove family likes to heat their home independently and economically with wood. They have eschewed the gym membership, and you can find them in their backyard working out on winter afternoons splitting and stacking wood. When you visit their toasty warm home this holiday season, here are the gifts you should bring:



Felling and Splitting Tools:
At Shelter, we carry the Gransfors Bruks line of hand-forged axes. Their quality and and craftsmanship is apparent the minute you hold one in your hands. For the Woodstove family (or any serious woodsman), the double-bit working axe is a great gift if they fell trees on their own property. When they need to split that wood, the splitting axe is the tool they'll need. (If they're more power tool oriented, we carry Efco chain saws at the store too. Call or stop in for details.)

Woodlot Knowledge:
What's one to do with all of those trees? Before the axe is sharpened, the Woodstove family should gather around with some hot cocoa and read The Woodlot Management Handbook. If you find the family can't seem to part with their favorite arbor, perhaps Home Tree Home, a step-by-step guide to building treehouses, is right for them.

Backwoods Tools:
A bark spud, loading tongs, and pulp hook are essential tools for the Woodstove family. We carry more backwoods tools too, if the family you know has a full collection of Swedish froes.

If It's Not Hot in the House:
Sometimes, even a hot woodstove can't heat the house. Shelter can still help. We all know that heat rises. So it's sometimes helpful to circulate the woodstove heat into living spaces. The Ecofan does just that. Place an Ecofan on top of a woodstove, and without using any electricity, the fan silently moves and circulates heat.

We also sell books on improving the house itself. Efficient Buildings 2 is a good reference for someone wanting to build an air-tight, energy efficient building.

If you are interested in becoming a Woodstove Family, Shelter is the place to begin. We can help you select a wood stove that best fits your home's needs. We sell Vermont Castings wood stoves, which may qualify for an energy tax credit. For more information about wood stoves, energy efficiency, or the Federal tax credit, read our blog posts on energy efficiency, or contact us.

Need more gift ideas? Send us an email at info@shelterinstitute.com or check back soon. We'll post more gift ideas from Shelter.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Intro to Masonry Heaters

Free Workshop Series
October 9, 2010
9:30-10:30 am
Join us for a one hour presentation on Masonry Heaters. When built well and integrated with the floorplan of a home, masonry heaters provide continuous and even heat with minimal poking, stoking and fussing. Masonry heaters store a large amount of heat in the mass of the heater. They combine the aesthetics of a masonry fireplace with the funtion and efficiency of a sealed combustion heater. This means that you can rapidly burn a large charge of wood without overheating your home. The heat is stored in the masonry thermal mass, and then slowly radiates into your house for the next 12 to 24 hours. The workshop will cover history and basic function of masonry stoves, different styles, and information regarding the effective integration of a heater into your home plans. Cooking and baking stoves as well as issues surrounding domestic hot water will also be discussed. Bring your floorplans along and our instructor will walk you through identifying the best location for a masonry heater.This is a FREE one hour workshop with a question and answer session at the end but you must register in advance as space is limited. Send an email with your name, address and phone number as well as the class subject and date to info@shelterinstitute.com or call 207-442-7938 to reserve your spot today.


The instructor, Eric Schroeder, spent three years working as an apprentice for different masonry heater builders in the United States and Canada. In 2007 he took a trip through Europe to attend the Austrian Kachelofenverband's annual trade show, and to visit with a stove builder in Friesland, northern Holland. He brings tales from the road and technical and practical information about heaters to this workshop.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Experiential Learning: North Haven School

Each year, North Haven School, Maine’s smallest public school, sends its students on an experiential learning expedition off-island. This year, students will attend a five day timber framing class at the Shelter Institute and build a timber frame classroom for their campus; providing them with life-skills as well as a new super-insulated space for future generation to use. North Haven’s tradition of blending classroom education with real world experience parallels the Shelter Institute in Woolwich, Maine and the two have teamed up to build a classroom and a program that will provide North Haven Students with marketable skills.

North Haven high school students will spend four days studying Timber Frame construction at Shelter Institute. They will learn engineering, design, joinery layout and cutting as well as tool selection and maintenance. At the end of the week they will return to North Haven with the Shelter Institute staff to assemble and raise the 20x20 structure. The new space will house a woodshop, workshop and a greenhouse providing space for boat-building classes, woodworking classes, and an expanded agricultural program.

North Haven educator John Dietter is thrilled with this year’s student expedition: “This project has so many beautiful, interlinking layers, since the students will help to create the space to support future students’ experiential learning experiences. Shelter Institute was the perfect partner in this project; the spectrum of services they have available is amazing. We told them what we wanted to teach our students through this year’s expedition and they made it happen. Every school student should have this opportunity.”
Shelter Institute was founded on experiential education, our organization’s philosophy is to connect the physics of house building with the practice. It is critical that students today see the Pythagorean Theorem in use so that they want to learn it and know how to apply it. In addition, building one’s own space makes a person appreciative of that space. Our hope is that the student involvement in this project will build on the strength of the community.”

Shelter Institute has taught more than 22,000 people how to design, build and live in energy efficient homes for over 35 years. Graduates have gone on to pursue careers in architecture, engineering, construction and design and they renovate, build or simply live more wisely in their own homes -knowledge is a tremendous asset that liberates them.

In addition to providing updated International Building Code information, some of Shelter Institute’s courses are college credits as general credits at the University of Southern Maine. Online registration and more information are available at http://www.shelterinstitute.com/. Send us an email to learn about designing your own experiential learning program at Shelter institute. info@shelterinstitute.com

Check us out on facebook to see photos of this upcoming week and notes from of the North Haven's students.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Northern New England Home, Garden & Flower Show

Shelter is at the Northern New England Home, Garden & Flower Show this Friday, Saturday, and Sunday in Fryeburg Maine.

According to the show's website:

The doors will open at 11:00 am on Friday; 10:00 am Saturday and Sunday, May 14, 15, 16, 2010. Our spring show is full of inspirational ideas for the home and garden. This year our home and energy related businesses are putting a special emphasis on updating and remodeling in today's new eco-friendly world, all designed to help consumers make informed decisions about their homes.
The show also offers a bonanza of gardening displays, "good old-fashioned fair food," and fun stuff for kids.

Visit Shelter's exhibitor tables and receive a 15% discount on our favorite tools we have on display. Gaius will give a presentation on Structural Insulated Panels (SIPs) at 11:45 am on Friday and Saturday morning as part of the Smart HomeOwner Seminar Series at the show. These presentations will be offered in Old MacDonald's Farm (follow the signs). Click on the image at left for more information (PDF) about other presenters.

The Show is at the Fryeburg Fairgrounds (directions). More details, including price of admission, a full list of exhibitors, and more can be found on the show's website.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Intro to Masonry Heaters


Saturday April 3
9:30-10:30
FREE

In this ever-changing energy market those of us living in cooler climates are always exploring more efficient ways of heating a home. Join us for a one hour presentation on Masonry Heaters. When built well and integrated with the floorplan of a home, masonry heaters provide continuous and even heat with minimal poking, stoking and fussing. Masonry heaters store a large amount of heat in the mass of the heater. They combine the aesthetics of a masonry fireplace with the funtion and efficiency of a sealed combustion heater. This means that you can rapidly burn a large charge of wood without overheating your home. The heat is stored in the masonry thermal mass, and then slowly radiates into your house for the next 12 to 24 hours. The workshop will cover history and basic function of masonry stoves, different styles, and information regarding the effective integration of a heater into your home plans. Cooking and baking stoves as well as issues surrounding domestic hot water will also be discussed. Bring your floorplans along and our instructor will walk you through identifying the best location for a masonry heater.This is a FREE one hour workshop with a question and answer session at the end but you must register in advance as space is limited. Send an email with your name, address and phone number as well as the class subject and date to info@shelterinstitute.com or call 207-442-7938 to reserve your spot today.
The instructor, Eric Schroeder, spent three years working as an apprentice for different masonry heater builders in the United States and Canada. In 2007 he took a trip through Europe to attend the Austrian Kachelofenverband's annual trade show, and to visit with a stove builder in Friesland, northern Holland. He brings tales from the road and technical and practical information about heaters to this workshop.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Learn How to do an Energy Audit on Your Home

Energy Audit Workshop
Saturday March 20, 2012
8:30-4:30
$100/Person

This is your last chance to sign up for this great workshop where we actually conduct an energy audit with a professional auditor.


There are many licenses and new terms being used to describe a home that is well insulated and uses a small amount of fuel to heat and or cool it and new codes being introduced to help create a benchmark for home construction. Shelter Institute has been teaching Energy Efficient home building since 1974 long before these terms and codes were developed but we thought it would be interesting to see how one of our super-insulated timber frame kits does under the scrutiny of a home energy audit and we thought it would helpful for the lay person to see what is involved in an official energy audit. We contacted Aaron Despres and invited him in to conduct an energy audit on a nearby timber frame with SIPS. He has been an inspector with Up-Country Building Inspectors, inc since 2007. In addition to providing residential energy auditing and consulting services, he inspects residential and commercial buildings. Aaron is a native of Harpswell, Maine and holds a Masters degree in Geology. He is certified as Building Analyst Professional by Building Performance Institute, #4380 * ASHI Associate, # 248862 * Member of MeCHIPS

Come spend the day with us on Saturday, March 20 and see what an official Energy Audit entails and if it is something you need to do to your own home. Call or visit our web site to register.

Registration for the workshop will close on Wednesday March 17th (Happy St. Patrick's Day!)

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Eco-Pecha Kucha at the Frontier Café

Maine people show how their organization or business sustainably manages natural resources and models green practices in 6-minute presentations, Thursday, February 18 at 6:30 PM at the Frontier Café, Gallery & Cinema, Ft. Andross, 14 Maine Street, Brunswick. Adopt-a-Loon, Androscoggin Brunswick-Topsham Riverwalk, Brunswick-Topsham Land Trust, Cathance River Education Alliance, The Lobster Conservancy, Maine Coast Heritage Trust, National Parks Service, Cold River Vodka and Shelter Institute join in this program of information and inspiration. Gaius Hennin, P.E. will be presenting on the merits of building energy efficient structures.

Entry Fee: $10 in advance or $12 at the door.
Location: Frontier Café, Gallery & Cinema, Ft. Andross, 14 Maine Street, Brunswick
Reservations recommended: 725-5222

Benefiting the Androscoggin Brunswick-Topsham Riverwalk this night of Pecha Kucha is a part of the month-long celebration of Longfellow Days—an eclectic mix of family entertainment and educational experiences. Top-flight lectures, poetry-readings, concerts, exhibits and tours. This is a unique opportunity to enjoy a community-wide mix of entertainment, history and cultural enrichment.

The Androscoggin Brunswick-Topsham Riverwalk is a joint endeavor by the towns of Brunswick and Topsham, modeled after the successful restoration of the Androscoggin Swinging Bridge. With Topsham as the designated project administrator, the project has received an initial grant from the Maine Department of Transportation for funding through MDOT’s Quality Community Program, the same program that funded the restoration of the Swinging Bridge. The first grant covers up the 80% of the cost of one portion of the Riverwalk. The committee continues to fundraise and locate grants for the completion of this very worthwhile project.

PechaKucha Night was devised in Tokyo in February 2003 as an event for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public. It has turned into a massive celebration, with events happening in hundreds of cities around the world, inspiring creatives worldwide. Drawing its name from the Japanese term for the sound of "chit chat", it rests on a presentation format that is based on a simple idea: 20 images x 20 seconds. It's a format that makes presentations concise, and keeps things moving at a rapid pace. http://www.pecha-kucha.org/

Friday, January 29, 2010

Energy Audit Workshop


Energy Audit Workshop
March 20, 2010
8:30-4:30
$100/person

What is an energy audit anyway? We invite you to join us in an audit of a super-insulated timber frame structure built in 2008. This is a thorough analysis of the energy efficiency of the structure utilizing the 'house as a system' approach where not only the efficiency and comfort are considered, but also building durability and occupant safety issues. We'll spend an hour in the classroom discussing the process and tools used and then go out into the field to actually conduct an audit. We'll re-group in the classroom at the end of the day to review our findings. Students will receive a copy of the auditors report with suggestions of how to improve the efficiency of the home.


Students will walk away from this class with a thorough understanding of what to expect from an energy audit and why it might be conducted, familiarity with the tools used, and an understanding of how to improve the efficiency of a home.

This class will be taught by guest instructor, Aaron Despres. He has been an inspector with Up-Country Building Inspectors, inc since 2007. In addition to providing residential energy auditing and consulting services, he inspects residential and commercial buildings. Aaron is a native of Harpswell, Maine and holds a Masters degree in Geology. * Certified as Building Analyst Professional by Building Performance Institute, #4380 * ASHI Associate, # 248862 * Member of MeCHIPS

Non-Refundable Registration Deposit:$100 To be deducted from tuition - balance due the first day of class. This Registration fee can be transferred once at no charge. A second request for transfer will incur a $100 transfer fee and a third request for transfer will result in the loss of deposit. All deposits on tuition and tuition payments are non-refundable.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Past Students. Current Projects: Wind Turbine

Shelter Institute students are some of the most talented, exciting, thoughtful and determined people in the world. And we love to keep in touch and hear what our graduates are doing. Check out this recent note from James and Kim Small Housebuilding Class of 2008.

We thought you might be interested to see photos of our newest project on the island. We are very excited to have wind power now (although the winds have been pretty slow these past few days).

The last photo (“CIP 006”) is a photo of James looking over a new charge inductive pulse battery conditioner. It is a novel device for rejuvenating any large battery and so far it seems to work pretty well. We are using it on our 16-battery PV bank, which has been in service for seven years now (and could use some rejuvenating).



We now have figures for the past few months on daily and average kWh production from our small wind project, a Bergey XL.1 turbine on a 56 foot tower.

I think the main lesson we have learned (and would like to pass along to others) is that PV panels (solar panels) are much more cost effective as a means of autonomous energy production than wind, unless the wind site is very unique (like the California or offshore sites that consistently get >20 mph. We did our own informal wind survey and felt fairly confident we'd get at least 1 kWh of production daily in the winter months (but only when the prevailing winds shifted to northerlies), and we've met that. However, many people we've spoken to have mistakenly used turbine specs rather than an integrated formula for wind speed and time to calculate what they will generate, only to be disappointed in the small amount of energy they actually are able to produce.

Our Bergey is rated for 1.1 kW instantaneous production at 20 mph. While it does this quite well, the actual time that we get constant 20 mph wind is fleeting compared to the average wind speeds. For most homes, windspeeds at 50 feet above ground level are 5-10 mph throughout the year. Given that the wind energy production is not a linear relationship between wind speed and electrical generation, consistent wind of even 10 mph (compared with a 20 mph constant site) drops electrical production by 800 percent (half the wind cubed).


With these things in mind, our daily kWh production average so far has been as follows:


Nov 09 = 0.7 kWh
Dec 09 = 1.7 kWh
Jan 09 = 1.9 kWH
This is consistently less than we produce with our 1,800 watt-rated PV system (ten 180 watt panels), even in a wintry January Maine. A friend of ours has a similar PV system with his panels angled for wintertime sun, and has been getting up to 7 kWh of production over the first days after New Years.


For our own situation, with a household electrical consumption closely monitored and very little traditional energy use (no incandescent lights, no electrical heat, and super-low-energy refrigeration), we use about 4 kWh of electricity every 24h. For comparison, if we lived in a more typical U.S. household, we would consume 24 kWh (based on an average per capita daily energy consumption of 12 kWh in 2007[...]).

Wholesale solar panels are now getting close to $1/watt in price (not production), which is a target many people think will make them competitive with grid-supplied power. Suntech, for example, is selling 10 kW of panels for $19,000 wholesale, which is under $2/watt. At this time, the lowest price individuals can get is somewhere around $3/watt. For example, we recently bought a 170 watt panel for $510 from Ramsond in Michigan.

So, for the biggest green generation bang, we recommend solar panels. Compared to wind, the sun is ubiquitous. Our situation is unique in that we know we'll get wind when the sun isn't out in the winter, so the wind project fills in a gap in our ability to generate power year round, and we have no other means of getting non-fossil power out here. An alternative would have been to double our solar PV bank and add batteries to our current 2,000 pound battery bank, storing excess energy on sunny days for those days when we have wind without sun.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Bragging Rights: Past Students Current projects: Solar Integration


Shelter Institute students are some of the most talented, exciting, thoughtful and determined people in the world. And we love to keep in touch and hear what our graduates are doing. Check out this recent note from James and Kim who took the Small Housebuilding Class of 2008.


The evolution of our back porch from an 1850’s-era summer shade piece to the backbone of a solar generating plant happened over seven years. We first designed and installed a 10-panel electrical system, wiring the house for both 12-volts DC and 120 volts AC, constructing a sixteen-piece battery bank, and hooking up everything to run through a panel with a smart charger and house-sized inverters. Our original intention was to start with wind as our power source, but fortunately we took a chance with sun first. Now that we have both wind and sun systems generating electricity for us, the sun has turned out to be much more reliable a power source, although the wind provides excellent supplemental power and provides charging on windy nights and stormy days, when the sun isn’t an option.

A year ago, we finished the design for a solar water heating system using a re-circulating antifreeze loop and a 3 watt DC pump controlled by a Maine-designed electrical solar thermostat. We had difficulty finding plumbers in our area who were familiar with this technology, though we hired one company that had little experience with our type of design. In the end, we ended up reworking many of the lines, flow-meters, and check valves the plumbers installed to get our system to work. Our experience has been that many contractors try to sell themselves as “green” contractors and as having experience with alternative energy systems, but we have not found many that live up to their claims.


Disappointingly, Maine winter sun is insufficient to heat our small 40 gallon hot water tank to bathing temperature, so we designed and built a second parallel antifreeze loop to run off our wood stove. The heat exchanger is a fabricated deep water-filled copper pan in which our closed antifreeze loop is immersed. The antifreeze is re-‘circulated through our hot water tank using a second 3 watt DC pump and electrical controller. Since we heat our home with wood in the winter, this system provides sufficient hot water for our winter domestic use.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Intro to Geothermal

Join us for a FREE workshop on Geothermal January 15 9:30-10:30 AM. We've invited guest speaker Tom Myette who works with Midnight Oil Company of Newcastle, Maine. They specialize in geothermal heating system installations and maintenance.  Tom will explain the basics of geothermal systems and how they work, the components and options available as well as cost, maintenance and long-term benefits. This is a great free opportunity to get a handle on what geothermal really is, what the pros and cons are of this type of heat.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Shelter Gift Ideas: For the Woodstove Family

Gift Ideas for the Woodstove Family



The woodstove family likes to heat their home independently and economically with wood. They have eschewed the gym membership, and you can find them in their backyard working out on fall afternoons splitting and stacking wood. When you visit their toasty warm home this holiday season, here are the gifts you should bring:


Felling and Splitting Tools:
At Shelter, we carry the Gransfors Bruks line of hand-forged axes. Their quality and and craftsmanship is apparent the minute you hold one in your hands. For the Woodstove family (or any serious woodsman), the double-bit working axe is a great gift if they fell trees on their own property. When they need to split that wood, the splitting axe is the tool they'll need. (If they're more power tool oriented, we carry Efco chain saws at the store too. Call or stop in for details.)

Woodlot Knowledge:
What's one to do with all of those trees? Before the axe is sharpened, the Woodstove family should gather around with some hot cocoa and read The Woodlot Management Handbook. If you find the family can't seem to part with their favorite arbor, perhaps Home Tree Home, a step-by-step guide to building treehouses, is right for them.

Backwoods Tools:
Even if you don't know what a froe, loading tong, or pulp hook are, they're essential tools for the Woodstove family. We carry more backwoods tools too, if the family you know has a full collection of Swedish froes.

If It's Not Hot in the House:
Sometimes, even a hot woodstove can't heat the house. Shelter can still help. We all know that heat rises. So it's sometimes helpful to circulate the woodstove heat into living spaces. The Ecofan does just that. Place an Ecofan on top of a woodstove, and without using any electricity, the fan silently moves and circulates heat.

We also sell books on improving the house itself. Efficient Buildings 2 is a good reference for someone wanting to build an air-tight, energy efficient building.

If you are interested in becoming a Woodstove Family, Shelter is the place to begin. We can help you select a wood stove that best fits your home's needs. We sell Vermont Castings wood stoves, which may qualify for an energy tax credit. For more information about wood stoves, energy efficiency, or the Federal tax credit, read our blog posts on energy efficiency, contact us, or attend one of our next "Intro to Wood Stove Best Practices" class. The class is free, and it will help you save money too.

Need more gift ideas? Contact us and check back soon. We'll post more gift ideas from Shelter.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Build Boston Trade Show


By Ethan Courand
Designer

I traveled to the Build Boston Trade Show on Friday Nov. 20th, which was held at the Seaport World Trade Center on Boston’s waterfront. With more than 250 exhibits and over 200 workshops, there wasn’t enough time in the day to see it all. This show was a bit different than some that I have been to in the past, in that it had something to offer to anyone who is involved in designing, constructing, maintaining, or occupying a building. Whether you are a student, architect, engineer, contractor, or a homeowner this show had something for you. The organizers brought all aspects of building together under one roof; exhibitors ranged from building product manufacturers to renewable energy companies to educational institutions. I did get a chance to stop and talk with some of our suppliers who had booths in the trade show. Marvin, our window supplier, had a huge display of windows and doors that took up the space of about eight standard size booths. Our structural insulated panel manufacturer was there as well, showing off their EPS Foam Core Panels as well as their new “Fast Form” insulated concrete form line. Longfellow Cedar Shingles  based in Windsor, Maine, caught my attention with a new MicroPro  pressure treated cedar shingle which brings maintenance free to a whole new level. All in all I had a great experience and I would recommend this event next year to anyone who is thinking about or is in the process of building or renovating a home.

As we travel to other trade shows across the country we'll report back on our findings and our experiences! If you have a favorite trade show that you think we should attend please make a suggestion.