Heat in the home

Use this board for general non-cycling-related chat, or to introduce yourself to the forum.

My central heating is set for what range?

I don't have central heating
11
15%
below 18
25
34%
18-20
27
37%
21-22
5
7%
23-25
2
3%
25-plus
3
4%
 
Total votes: 73

roubaixtuesday
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by roubaixtuesday »

mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:25pm
roubaixtuesday wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:19pm
mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:15pm Solar panels aren't made of materials that catch fire. Question anyone telling you otherwise.
From the linked article.

most fires in 2024 began in the inverter or panel itself, components that can overheat when installation or ventilation is inadequate.
Right, so it's misleading nonsense then, because:

1. an inverter fire is not a panel fire, same as a fire in a faulty battery that was charged by solar power is not a panel fire;

2. the panel overheating is still not going to make the panel catch fire unless there's another installation fault. The panels themselves do not catch fire. If a magnifying glass or similar lens starts a forest fire, we still call that a forest fire, not a glass fire.

I bet whoever wrote that report is not an NUJ member.
It would probably help if you read the article before deriding it?
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mjr
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by mjr »

roubaixtuesday wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:35pm
mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:25pm
roubaixtuesday wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:19pm

From the linked article.

most fires in 2024 began in the inverter or panel itself, components that can overheat when installation or ventilation is inadequate.
Right, so it's misleading nonsense then, because:

1. an inverter fire is not a panel fire, same as a fire in a faulty battery that was charged by solar power is not a panel fire;

2. the panel overheating is still not going to make the panel catch fire unless there's another installation fault. The panels themselves do not catch fire. If a magnifying glass or similar lens starts a forest fire, we still call that a forest fire, not a glass fire.

I bet whoever wrote that report is not an NUJ member.
It would probably help if you read the article before deriding it?
Only in that the derision is more detailed, it would seem. The basic point stands: it's calling stuff solar panel fires that aren't fires in/of the solar panel. It's renewables-bashing.

( I didn't read the article because 200+ "partners" wanted to do stuff with my browser and personal details, I didn't have time to wade through the terms just now and I'm not in the habit of blithely clicking the "accept". It would be nice if the people who do accept such browser harvesting posted some details, but it seems like it wouldn't have mattered this time.)
MJR, mostly pedalling 3-speed roadsters. KL+West Norfolk BUG incl social easy rides http://www.klwnbug.co.uk
All the above is CC-By-SA and no other implied copyright license to Cycle magazine.
roubaixtuesday
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by roubaixtuesday »

Meanwhile, gas prices have near *doubled* in the last week as a result of the Mango Mussolini's adventures in Iran.

Anyone still thinking investing in renewables is too expensive?

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rjb
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by rjb »

Just a temporary hiccup. There's still a glut of oil around. We could all be buying it from Russia soon. :shock: Petrol has jumped up from £1.29 to £1.33 at our local garage.
Peugeot 531 pro, Dawes Discovery Tandem, Dawes Kingpin X2, Raleigh 20 stowaway, 1965 Moulton deluxe, Falcon K2 MTB dropped bar tourer, Longstaff trike conversion on a Giant XTC 840, Apollo transition. :D
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RickH
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by RickH »

mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 7:08pm
roubaixtuesday wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:35pm
mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:25pm
Right, so it's misleading nonsense then, because:

1. an inverter fire is not a panel fire, same as a fire in a faulty battery that was charged by solar power is not a panel fire;

2. the panel overheating is still not going to make the panel catch fire unless there's another installation fault. The panels themselves do not catch fire. If a magnifying glass or similar lens starts a forest fire, we still call that a forest fire, not a glass fire.

I bet whoever wrote that report is not an NUJ member.
It would probably help if you read the article before deriding it?
Only in that the derision is more detailed, it would seem. The basic point stands: it's calling stuff solar panel fires that aren't fires in/of the solar panel. It's renewables-bashing.

( I didn't read the article because 200+ "partners" wanted to do stuff with my browser and personal details, I didn't have time to wade through the terms just now and I'm not in the habit of blithely clicking the "accept". It would be nice if the people who do accept such browser harvesting posted some details, but it seems like it wouldn't have mattered this time.)
There is a reasonably easy to spot "decline all" option which is what I selected.

The article refers to solar panel installations or systems and pins the blame mostly on items integral to the useful functioning of the panels, such as inverters or storsge batteries, being poorly installed.

It's a bit like arguing that fires in houses aren't "house fires" because they caused by poorly installed electrical equipment.
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mjr
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by mjr »

RickH wrote: 3 Mar 2026, 8:02pm
mjr wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 7:08pm
roubaixtuesday wrote: 2 Mar 2026, 5:35pm

It would probably help if you read the article before deriding it?
Only in that the derision is more detailed, it would seem. The basic point stands: it's calling stuff solar panel fires that aren't fires in/of the solar panel. It's renewables-bashing.

( I didn't read the article because 200+ "partners" wanted to do stuff with my browser and personal details, I didn't have time to wade through the terms just now and I'm not in the habit of blithely clicking the "accept". It would be nice if the people who do accept such browser harvesting posted some details, but it seems like it wouldn't have mattered this time.)
There is a reasonably easy to spot "decline all" option which is what I selected.
There's literally no such option in the version of the popup that I get. I attach a screenshot. I'm fairly sure hiding the decline like that is illegal, so even if you find where they bury it, why would you trust them not to also illegally ignore it?
The article refers to solar panel installations or systems and pins the blame mostly on items integral to the useful functioning of the panels, such as inverters or storsge batteries, being poorly installed.
Most batteries aren't integral to panel functioning. They're an optional extra.

And fires in then are called "battery fires" or similar, unless you have some irrational agenda against solar panels, or similar.
It's a bit like arguing that fires in houses aren't "house fires" because they caused by poorly installed electrical equipment.
At least in those fires, the house is actually alight, but even they are more often called after what started the fire, like a bin fire, cooker fire or chip pan fire.
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MJR, mostly pedalling 3-speed roadsters. KL+West Norfolk BUG incl social easy rides http://www.klwnbug.co.uk
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RickH
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by RickH »

mjr wrote: 3 Mar 2026, 10:20pm
There's literally no such option in the version of the popup that I get. I attach a screenshot. I'm fairly sure hiding the decline like that is illegal, so even if you find where they bury it, why would you trust them not to also illegally ignore it?
Sorry, I'm on my phone browser so can't switch back & forth as easily as on the computer. It is one of the choices when you go onto "options" which gives you the "decline all" (or something like that) without having to doomscroll down a massive list, as well as ploughing through individual choices if you so wish. So not hidden but, also, not in-your-face obvious.

It probably isn't worth arguing about it too much. If you're into all the technicalities of it then it matters which bit is which. Most people will just "get solar panels" and not be bothered about all the ins & outs that there is more to the complete installation. If they get a battery that will probably be part of the package.

I think the important lesson is that people ensuring they find someone reputable to do the job.
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mjr
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by mjr »

RickH wrote: 3 Mar 2026, 11:16pm I think the important lesson is that people ensuring they find someone reputable to do the job.
Well, yes, and guess what religion the pope is? That's far from unique to solar panels, and doesn't merit blaming them in the headline. I wonder how many fires are linked to bad building work in total.
MJR, mostly pedalling 3-speed roadsters. KL+West Norfolk BUG incl social easy rides http://www.klwnbug.co.uk
All the above is CC-By-SA and no other implied copyright license to Cycle magazine.
roubaixtuesday
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Joined: 18 Aug 2015, 7:05pm

Re: Heat in the home

Post by roubaixtuesday »

For the people who believe that authorising more drilling would solve our energy problems


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Cugel
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by Cugel »

mjr wrote: 4 Mar 2026, 9:09am
RickH wrote: 3 Mar 2026, 11:16pm I think the important lesson is that people ensuring they find someone reputable to do the job.
Well, yes, and guess what religion the pope is? That's far from unique to solar panels, and doesn't merit blaming them in the headline. I wonder how many fires are linked to bad building work in total.
Yet some heating devices are of themselves dangerous, inefficient and generally to be avoided or even banned. Another report concerning “smokeless or low-smoke fuels" used in wood burners discovers that despite appearing "clean" they in fact emit two-to-three times the dangerous ultrafine particles of bog-standard woodburning, particles that lodge in the lung then gradually kill the victim.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... ungs-study

The fans of the flame will have the usual rebuttals, no doubt - "It smells nice, looks nice and is comforting". Yet it will kill them too, slowly, just as it will those of us who do not care for the stinks and damages. The killing process is just a lot harder to see and admit to than being, say, electrocuted by a a badly-installed electric heater or burnt-up in a vanishingly-rare battery fire.
“Practical men who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence are usually the slaves of some defunct economist”.
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PDQ Mobile
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Re: Heat in the home

Post by PDQ Mobile »

Cugel wrote: 20 Mar 2026, 8:46am
mjr wrote: 4 Mar 2026, 9:09am
RickH wrote: 3 Mar 2026, 11:16pm I think the important lesson is that people ensuring they find someone reputable to do the job.
Well, yes, and guess what religion the pope is? That's far from unique to solar panels, and doesn't merit blaming them in the headline. I wonder how many fires are linked to bad building work in total.
Yet some heating devices are of themselves dangerous, inefficient and generally to be avoided or even banned. Another report concerning “smokeless or low-smoke fuels" used in wood burners discovers that despite appearing "clean" they in fact emit two-to-three times the dangerous ultrafine particles of bog-standard woodburning, particles that lodge in the lung then gradually kill the victim.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... ungs-study

The fans of the flame will have the usual rebuttals, no doubt - "It smells nice, looks nice and is comforting". Yet it will kill them too, slowly, just as it will those of us who do not care for the stinks and damages. The killing process is just a lot harder to see and admit to than being, say, electrocuted by a a badly-installed electric heater or burnt-up in a vanishingly-rare battery fire.
"Fans of the flame" :D
Glad to see "bog standard" fares somewhat better!
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