Friday, August 14, 2015

Kitchen - the benchtop

First things first: this will be my last post on this blog. But fear not! (she says conceitedly) I'm reviving my old writing home, and starting next week will be putting my renovation updates there, along with some recipes and other lifestyle stuff. I hope you'll join me over there... Sorry for messing with your reading platform. ;-)

I will move our to-do list and the posts I've written here over to that site so that I have everything in one place, but will still be writing a new house-related post a week and I'll do my best to make it easy for anyone who doesn't like food (is that a thing?) to jump straight to the reno stuff.

A much better texture than chipboard. 
Right, down to business - we now have a proper benchtop. Bye bye chipboard! Bye bye manky old stainless steel! Bye bye leaky taps! It's a pretty flash one - engineered stone - so was kinda pricey but I love it.

Not so much a DIY affair, but it does feel like a monumental step towards kitchen completion, and there was a fair bit of thinking in the process.

There are lots of options in the benchtop realm: granite, marble, engineered stone, stainless steel, treated wood of varying varieties, laminate. Last time around we went with a laminate top, which was fine, but we really like the look (and resilience) of stone so wanted to try that this time around.

Bramco supplied our bench - we got a couple of quotes and theirs was the cheapest, but our dealings with them were excellent so I'd highly recommend them on service as well. They have loads of options, but we narrowed it down to three samples, took them home and pretty quickly settled on white with a visible aggregate.

Can you see the join? 
Mostly for aesthetic reasons, but also to provide a nice high working surface, we wanted a 60mm thick bench. Stone comes in 20mm and 30mm thick sheets, so to get a thicker bench they mitre the corners and construct the edges from separate pieces to give the illusion the whole bench is 60mm thick. You can't tell unless you know - and I'm sure the folk who installed it were glad not to have to carry double the weight up the stairs.

We opted for a waterfall end on our peninsula (is that the most pretentious sentence so far in this post?). We were planning to gib the end, as we've done around the top cabinets, but that wouldn't have been as robust (it's a pretty high-traffic area) and the waterfall looks fantastic.



Our sink is this black composite stone double bowl model, which we ordered online. And the tap is a Methven Kiri. The arm of the tap doesn't stick out as far across the sink as I'd like but design won the day and it was still the right decision given the available options.


The installation took about two hours on a Friday morning - pretty quick - though because we opted for an undermount sink we had to wait 24 hours to hook up the plumbing (lest the pressure be too much for the partially cured adhesive).

I got to roll up my sleeves for the plumbing bit. My dad had plumbed in our temporary bench, so all the appropriate pipes were in place, but I got the honour of installing the new mixer tap on my own. I might have called him twice while I was doing it (which, as he'll tell you, is low call volume for when I'm on DIY duty) and I may possibly have connected the hot and cold backwards, but it works and the house did not flood. Winning!


(we don't have the second sink plumbed in yet, as that's beyond my very limited abilities - waiting for Dad to come visit us again)

What do you think? And do you think stone is worth the cost or do you prefer a different look?


Saturday, August 8, 2015

Central heating: overview and numbers

Here's the last of the central heating info - we haven't had a power bill yet so will update with approximate running costs when we get that, but for now I thought I'd summarise what we think and how much it cost.

The highly attractive heating unit, just after we started the ducting

The system we chose is the Rinnai iHeat. It's a ducted system, so blows warm air into the rooms. The air is warmed by water from the Infinity water heater we installed (which will also eventually serve both bathrooms and the kitchen).

Pros:

  • Keeps the whole house warm when we have the system turned on
  • Warms the house up pretty quickly (much quicker than a heat pump or fire)
  • Cheapest option for whole-house heating
  • Ceiling vents are unobtrusive
  • Very quiet
  • Efficient (and hopefully cheap to run!)
Cons: 
  • Blown air is not quite as nice as radiant heat
  • Can't control zones separately - one thermostat for the whole house
We have made a few tweaks to improve performance, and have a couple of other things we're planning to do in the longer term as well. 

Behold the button-thing, by which the vents may be adjusted
Firstly, balancing is part of the set up, but basically just means varying how open the vents are. Each vent has a button-thing (technical term) in the middle which allows you to adjust flaps inside the grill. The flaps can be mostly closed (so almost no air flows through) or fully opened (so as much as possible comes in). To balance the system, i.e. try to get all the rooms evenly heated, you start with the rooms furthest away from the heating unit, fully opening their vents, and then work back towards the centre of the house, with the more central vents being progressively more closed. 

Despite balancing, the airflow downstairs isn't as good. There are three ducts for downstairs; one in our son's room; one in our room; and one in the future bathroom. The one in our son's room works pretty well, but is poorly located above the door. Since his door gets closed when he's napping, which is when it most needs to be warm, it works okay, but we'll monitor that for a while and may eventually move the vent. 

Our bedroom is served by a poorly installed piece of flexible ducting, adopted from the HRV. Our room is the least accessible, ducting-wise, so we plan to eventually (before next winter!) get a length of rectangular plastic ducting to replace the dodgy old stuff. Because it's a straight run but we don't have good access between the rafters to smooth out the flexible ducting we think this will make a big difference. 

The bathroom vent is currently capped, because the bathroom doesn't even have walls and we're not really interested in paying to heat the dirt under our house. Once the bathroom has been built and that vent is in action we imagine the downstairs will become a bit more temperate, but in the meantime we've still got a heat pump down there for colder days (it's probably been turned on - briefly - three times in the past two weeks). 

We noticed immediately after it was turned on that the roofspace was very hot when the system was running, and realised that some gaps in the metalwork of the heating unit meant heat was escaping unnecessarily. I rang Rinnai to check if we could stop up these gaps, and they said that was no problem, so long as we used an appropriately heat-rated silicon sealant - so out came the caulk gun and now hopefully we're not leaking money into the attic. ;-) 

Another possible future tweak is the addition of a damper so we could turn off rooms not in use. These can be operated by a wall switch and can close off a branch of the system. The advice on this is a bit conflicting - our gasfitter said the iHeat's computer would shut down if we used one, as it would detect the damper as a blockage in the system, but Rinnai's info says they can be used. We'll see how the running costs look and then potentially do more research on that one.

The position of the thermostat is the subject of some discussion - it's in the warmest area of the house, which is not ideal, but it is conveniently located... So again we're going to wait and see. Installation consisted of poking a bit of cable down the wall and plugging the wall unit into it, so if we decide it would be better somewhere else we just need to fish the cable out and dangle it down a different wall. 

Overall we're very happy - the thermostat is quite programmable, so it turns on before we get up in the morning and turns itself off at bedtime, and we are magically kept warm without even thinking about it. You can easily turn it off if you're leaving when it's programmed to be on, and you can increase the temperature and/or fans temporarily if you're feeling particularly cold. 

And the cost - well, it's a big outlay, yes, but overall not too bad considering the outcome. For us, well worth it. If you're looking for something similar but don't have reticulated gas available in your area I'd encourage you to look into heat pump central heating - slightly more expensive but still a lot more reasonable than a furnace system! 

Costs:
System install (Infinity water heater and iHeat system, including commissioning) - $10,547.88
Extra vents - $184.71
Electrical work - power to the Infinity and iHeat units, decommissioning heat pump - $500 (approx)
RJ45 cable and connector for thermostat - $16.80
Cable ties - $92
Recovered $$$ from sale of both HRVs and one heat pump (less Trademe fees) -  -$1748.27

Central heating installation
Budget: $10,000
Timeframe: 6 weeks (mostly waiting for gas to be hooked up)
Who did the work: Us (4 days), gasfitters (1.5 days), sparkies (half a day)
Actual cost: $9,593.12
Learnings: Installing ducting isn't very hard, though it is a bit unpleasant spending a lot of time crawling around in attics. Pay attention to how things are working after installation as small tweaks can make big improvements in performance and efficiency.