Jump to:

                                        Running on Empty

Required reading:

 

Chris Goodall "How to Live a Low Carbon Life"

Chris Goodall "How to Live a Low-Carbon Life"

 

Richard Heinberg "The Party's Over"

Richard Heinberg "The Party's Over"

 

George Monbiot "Heat"

George Monbiot "Heat"

 

Required watching:

 

DVD - "The Power of Community"

The Power of Community - How Cuba Survived Peak Oil - DVD

 

DVD - "The End of Suburbia"

The End of Suburbia - Oil Depletion & the Collapse of the American Dream - DVD

Home
1. Organise
2. Powerdown
3. Recycle
4. Substitute
5. Stay
6. Generate
7. Grow
8. Invest
9. Make
10. Community
Peak Oil
Energy Security
Climate Change
Carbon Cutters HQ
FAQ & About Us
Contact

CC HQ Boiler
CC HQ Insulation
CC HQ Lights
CC HQ Draughts

Post-Carbon Man
Carbon Cutters Forum
High Wycombe Group

 

The Revolution

This is a revolution. If you want to shut an airport then stop flying. Want an end to factory farming? Grow your own. An end to pollution? Change to renewables. An end to war & poverty? Microgenerate. Life for your childen? Stop needing oil. YOU have THIS Power. You do not need Government. Seize the initiative. Bring democracy to your community. Be an example to your children. Take responsibility. Change for good today.

Organise | Powerdown | Recycle | Substitute | Stay | Generate | Grow | Invest | Make | Community

Draught Dodgers

 

     The simplest and cheapest action you can take to make your home warmer in the north European winter is to stop unnecessary draughts from getting in. At this point it is worth drawing a distinction between a draught and ventilation. Ventilation is like the good flower you want in your garden and the draught is the unwanted weed. They are both a flow of air into your house but what separates the two is the quantity and the quality. You only need a small airflow to keep the air fresh and this air can be prewarmed in a well designed house. A draught, on the other hand, is just too much air at a low temperature and often just in the wrong place, ie, around doors or right where you sit.

     So, kill your draughts. It is easy and inexpensive. The methods shown here required a bit of shopping on the internet or a trip to a DIY store. However, if you are interested there are other means of stopping draughts, by such means as rolled up socks in a pair of tights, that require little or no expenditure at all.

 

Chimney Balloon

 

     Yes, you read that right. A "Chimney Balloon" is an obscure device that is literally a balloon that you inflate inside your chimney to stop draughts. You have to measure your chimney from the inside first. Easier said than done. Then you will need to look on the internet because this is not the sort of thing you could find locally. We got ours from Chimney Cowl Products who sold the smaller 9in x 9in type for just over £15. This suited our needs but it did seem a little expensive. We asked around and a friend of ours said she screwed up newspaper into a plastic bag and showed it up her chimney when it wasn't in use. This might work for you but not for us because our Carbon Cutter HQ is only about 25 years old so is relatively modern, has a small lined flue with a conical metal section at the bottom (see photo's).

 

 

     This meant it would be difficult to get anything up the chimney without it staying there forever. At a later stage we are planning to fit a wood-burning stove. The stove will kill the draughts for good of course so this was a stop-gap only (pun intended). There is already a coal-effect gas fire in the fireplace. Somehow we object to the idea of burning one fossil fuel to pretend to be another fossil fuel whilst all the heat just goes right up the chimney. That seems so crude and unnecessary in this day and age. This is the 21st Century for goodness sake. We can do better than that. So we stumped up the cash and bought the chimney balloon solution. It is poor value for money as the eventual bill came to over £30 once they added VAT, the cost of a tube to blow the thing up a nearly unbelievable £12 postage charge. Where do Chimney Cowl Products send these things from? The moon? Royal Mail second class postage would have been fine for a couple of quid. As we are assessing the product we paid the ridiculous price anyway - just to try it. However we suggest you shop around a bit more or see if you can't shove something else up your chimney instead.

 

     The balloon is not very large with an inflation stalk taking up most of the space. The balloon is square shaped so it fits the chimney exactly. You can buy all kinds of shapes and sizes. It does exactly as it says on the instruction sheet though. You can't complain. It fits exactly. Shove it up the chimney, inflate, lock the valve to stop the air from coming out and remove the inflation tube. It hardly took any time at all. It fits very snug and there are no more draughts down our chimney. You get a rather pointless little red tag to stick in your fireplace to help you remember that it is there. Just in case you have a senior moment. Joking aside - our friend did and filled her room with smoke! The chimney balloon will, as you can imagine, just melt if you light a fire under it. Bomb goes £30 of your hard earnt cash. I imagine the pay-back period is atrocious at this 'inflated' (2nd pun!) cost. But if you never use your fire then you had better get something like this. Don't forget that a chimney is just a big hole in the wall. It would be senseless to leave it open to the elements.

 

Front Door

 

     Our front door was not a big problem. Thankfully the builders or previous owners had fitted rubberised draught excluder strips around the outside of the door externally. However after a recent cold-snap a brief period on my knees found a howling gale at the base of the door. This is easily solved. I popped down to B&Q (DIY Store in the UK) and bought an 800mm strip of rubberised draught excluder for external doors. This was planned to fit to the inside of the door. Measure the door and then remove the rubber strip from the brass-effect mounting strip. Take a junior hack-saw and remove the excess from the metal strip. Slide the rubber strip back in and use pliers to snip off the excess at the end. Remember to crimp the ends to stop the rubber from sliding out.

 

     Now for the tricky part. Put the draught excluder into position on the closed door. Use a bradawl to make a hole for one screw at one end. Then screw on that end. Then go to the other end and try and get everything even. Secure that end with a screw (the pack came with screws supplied). At this moment open and close the door to see if the strip interferes with anything. We secured ours to the door so that it would not get trodden on by people walking through the door. This is only correct but you have to check you don't foul something else upon opening. In our case the strip would not seal properly as it caught of a strip of wood securing the end of the wooden flooring.

 

     So I removed the strip and secured it again a couple of millimeters higher up and tried again. Success. Then secure in the rest of the screws. The strip is quite flexible so you can contour it if the door edge is not quite straight. This went well but the rubber strip would not seal tight to the bottom of the door frame as the two didn't line up. No problem. Take a section of "P" section foam draught excluder (also available from any DIY store) and attach this to the bottom of the door frame (with the door open of course). Close the door and you should find a tight snug fit and no more draughts.

 

Job done.

 

 

 

Letter Box

 

     Our letter box did have a twin brush seal installed at some previous point. However it was worn out, bent and broken. Within a couple of weeks of us moving in, the tape holding it together gave out and it fell apart. Useless. The letter slot is larger than the standard at 9cm high rather than 8cm. This is because the outer flap folds inwards so the extra cm allows the flap to not foul the flow of letters. All well and good but a trip to B&Q showed they only had the 8cm variety of letterbox brush seals. No problem though - the previous owners had nailed a strip of white hardboard along the top edge of the internal door to block off the extra 1cm of space. This fix was a little flimsy but good enough for the purpose.

 

     The old brush seal was removed and the new one simply slotted into the same position. Mark the positions of the new holes with a bradawl and screw on the new brush seal. The only bit of fun in the entire job was applying transparent mastic sealant around the edge of the new brush seal and white hardboard section. This was (obviously) to stop drafts coming around the side of the fitting but also helped secure everything as the fixture is a bit 'plasticy' and flimsy. I am sure after the postman has shoved small packets through it one hundred times it could just snap and fall off... So it needs all the added strength you can give it. Job done.

 

 

Internal Door

 

     One of the first DIY tasks, when we came to this new HQ, was to sort out the dreadful fit around this internal door that leads from front door to lounge. The door is warped out of shape and, although it closes well, it leaves vast gaps around top, bottom and side. So the first thing we did was to get a roll of "P" section foam strip and stick it around the inside of the door frame. This gave it a tight fit and stopped it from rattling. It also stopped most of the draught but we recognised early on that we would have to come back and fix the door underside. There was a gap big enough to put your fingers under.

 

 

     You may ask why if we have sealed in the front door why would we bother with this one? Well, think of it as security in depth. You may wish to answer the front door and not let in a draught so having a good seal on the inner door to this 'air-lock' is essential. Besides it is all good 'belt and braces'. The draught excluder chosen for this job was also from B&Q and was a brush-type. You have to use this on internal doors because unlike external doors there is no lip underfoot for the seal to butt-up against. Hence the seal has to be in contact with the floor making a brush variety more appropriate. Fixing this in place is essentially the same procedure as for the rubber seal on the external door. Measure the width and then cut off the excess. Crimp the end of the brush to stop it all falling out. Press into place against the closed door and mark the holes with a bradawl. Then just screw it in place. Do open and close the door a few times during this to make sure the door seal doesn't jam against anything. Sometimes floors are uneven so be careful. There were not enough holes in the strip so I added an extra one at one end. Job done.

 

Conservatory Doors

 

     The Conservatory and the doors leading to them are somewhat of a joke. The doors are the original wooden ones for the house so have no double-glazing. Hence the conservatory is the second layer of glass! It is better than nothing but the conservatory isn't double-glazed either. It will have to go - as will these wooden doors. However, that is for the future. The doors do fit very well and still have the original seals around them. However the seals at the bottom had perished whilst there was no seal where the two doors joined. We removed any ineffectual seal and cleaned up. Then we took our favourite "P" section foam strip (we get through a lot of this stuff) and stuck it around the edge. Job done.

 

     Well, almost. There wasn't quite enough space for the sealing strip between the doors so the doors would not lock properly afterwards. Hence it was a matter of taking to the lock with a file to open the hole out a little. Job done. Again.

 

Summary

 

     All the windows in the house are double glazed so there is no more work there. Within a few months of moving in we did get the old wooden doors between garden & garage, and from the kitchen-to-garage, replaced with modern double-glazed security doors. Hence no draughts there. However, there is always more to be done in future:

 

  • We can fit additional plastic glazing panels to those wooden doors to the Conservatory. This would be a cheap and cheerful solution to keeping the lounge warm before replacing the doors completely. You can buy thin film plastic but if you have a small child they will just tear it.

  • There is also an old wood-framed, single-glazed, window in the garage that is original to the house. Obviously we don't heat the garage but it does form a thermal barrier to the kitchen next to it, and the bedroom above it. The garage houses an occasionally warm car and a warm boiler. Hence if that heat can be retained for longer it will help keep the rest of the house warm too. The garage door was replaced by a roller unit that is made up of foam-filled metal slats. That offers up quite a good thermal barrier plus it seals much better than the old 'up-and-over' garage door. This is all to the good. Hence we are considering getting some secondary glazing for the garage window too.

 

     As we say - think of defence against cold and draughts as coming in depth. Don't reply upon just one layer, fix two or more for added warmth.

 

References: References
 
Contract and Converge

Blog

Any Questions about what you have read here? Do you have an opinion you wish to share with us? Want an update on Carbon Cutting topics hitting the news?

Then trip over to our Blog and Forum for the latest and greatest news and information. (Click on screen left or right.)

Forum

     
 

Web Site donated by Krofire Enterprises Ltd, - CO2 balanced at CO2balance.com

Krofire Enterprises Ltd