Posted By DaveJJ on 25 Apr 2014 04:55 PM
Thanks for the reply nooboo
That is an interesting setup. I assume you are running some sort of fan strong enough to overcome the friction of your ground pipe and meet the needs of your furnace? If so is that fan triggered when your blower comes on? Is there no danger of not getting enough air and having a CO problem?
I have in-floor slab heat with a GSHP, no furnace.
We have passive make-up air in our design with Panasonic Whisper Vents. Here is a decent write-up of a design (only not with the Panasonic whisper vents):
http://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/blogs/dept/green-building-blog/exhaust-only-ventilation-systems
Our house has been blower door tested and the system works here; it's a good tight house, despite the passive vents.
Yes, there is a decent fan to bring the air in through the 30 feet or so of pipe. I have it set on a timer so that the fan is only coming on when the solar wall is getting sun. I might get it on an electric eye, or a solar powered fan or a diff temp controller. No big danger of a buildup of CO, I am mostly electric, but the wood burning stove is the one concern.
I know zero about HVAC and I'm coming from a 100 year old house, full of holes, no insulation and standard low efficiency furnace.
With only exhaust ventilation are you putting your house under negative pressure or do you have your windows open a lot?
"Your warmest incoming air will likely give you your best efficiencies"
According to this research report that is not the case with an HRV http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/odpub/pdf/67558.pdf?lang=en
"Interaction with the heat recovery ventilator (HRV) The literature shows that strictly from an energy point of view, there is very strong evidence that combining an EAHX and a HRV provides little benefit in heating mode. Both devices are trying to raise the temperature of the incoming air; but the temperature rise caused by the EAHX makes the HRV work less efficiently, so the combined energy gain is much less than the sum of the gains of each system working independently. This is also confirmed by several experimental studies which have shown that when an HRV is present, the advantage of combining it with an EAHX is minimal from an energy point of view. "
Maybe my best bet is to use a ground loop strictly for cooling as my cooling requirements are much lower
That may be the Economic Law of Diminishing Returns in action...
You have passed me in the acronym race as I do not know what EAHX without 'googling'...is it entering air heat exchanger?
There are more ways than one to handle your project; keep us posted!
Brian