Is a Heat Recovery System the Right Choice for Your Home?

When you’re looking to reduce the cost of heating over the next 5-10 years, just using less of it or turning the thermostat temperature level down only goes so far. With the difficulty for homeowners to find an affordable energy provider, it’s useful to consider if there are any other options available to reduce costs.

With heat recovery systems, these represent an alternative to traditional heating systems. They offer unique advantages that regular systems simply don’t and cannot deliver. In this article, we discuss what these advantages are and whether that makes heat recovery the right choice for your home.

What is a Heat Recovery System?

Traditional heating systems generate heat in various ways and then push it out across the room. When there’s a radiator or other type of heater in a given room, the space can benefit from the warmth. However, when there’s not or it’s not turned on yet, then that area will stay unusually cold and is at risk of developing damp.

When using the heating, the warm air rises to the ceiling, through to the upper floors and eventually out of the roof. Some warmth also escapes through poorly insulated walls too. A heat recovery system is designed to capture the generated heat at the ceiling before it’s lost and then once it’s been filtered, redistribute it throughout the home.

How is Heat Recovery Better?

Rather than continually heating and re-heating every room in the home, with heat recovery a room is heated once. Then that warmth is filtered for bad air particles like dust and pollen. The warmth is then captured at this time. New air is then pulled in from outside, filtered and the captured warmth is infused into the clean air. The fresh, warm air is then distributed throughout the home using a ducting system.

The result is a more consistent warmth instead of the temperature regularly rising and then falling and repeating this expensive cycle.

Can You Save Money?

Yes, you can.

Due to the fact that the heating is used less frequently, and warmth isn’t all lost through the roof, the energy bill is considerably lower. This is especially true in winter when bills often double or triple in value due to the colder weather.

The heat recovery units operate using low energy levels.  So they’re far less energy-intensive than turning the heating on and off throughout the day.

It’s a good idea to use a heat recovery specialist like BPC Ventilation.com to ensure the right size units are installed for you. This way, each unit will have sufficient capacity to work effectively without overtaxing the system.

A heat recovery system works in consort with an existing heating system. It can extend its useful life because it’s utilised less frequently, so it puts less wear and tear on the system. Also, the cost of a heat recovery system is more than covered by the savings on future energy bills. So, it’s an eco-friendly change and saves money too. A win-win.