where do I find the Calorific Value

Hi,

the device I am using to display data does not have energy, but it does have volume (for watering plants). I was going to convert daily gas kwh from a SMETS1 meter to volume but I can't see a Calorific Value in my MQTT. Does the meter just assume a CV or not put it on MQTT. An alternative is to timestamp changes and calculate a power and use the electrical power capability to pretend gas is electricity.

thanks

Comments

  • It's always published on your gas bill for each billing period. I don't think anything gets it to MQTT. I had a look at my Glowmarkt MQTT output and couldn't see calorific value.

  • edited January 22

    I've been looking into this myself, and believe that the meter uses a constant value for the CV, which will not be the same as the monthly average value used by your supplier for billing.

    I have found the following page on the National Gas website which provides the CV data for a charging zone over a date period:

    https://data.nationalgas.com/find-gas-data

    I think downloading the data can probably be automated (I haven't tried yet myself) as the 'URL' button to the far right of 'View data' copies a URL for the request to the clipboard - it seems to include the requested date range and a list of the zones using ID numbers.

    And you can find the distribution zone (DZ) for your area using the postcode checker here: https://www.energybrokers.co.uk/gas/gas-network

    Hope this helps, although it's probably more information than you were asking for!

  • Your variable gas calorific value is always on your gas bill. Mine shows as 1.02264 on my last bill. It is NOT part of the Glowmarkt MQTT stream.

  • Indeed, I was interested in seeing how much the CV varied over the month, rather than just having the average value given on the bill.

    And 1.02264 is a correction factor for temperature and pressure - the calorific value is in the range 37.5 to 43.0.

  • Sorry did I pick the wrong number off my bill.

    58.7 × 1.02264 × 39.2† ÷ 3.6 = 653.6

    That's for 58.7 units (M^3) consumed.

    With 1.02264 volume correction.

    And a CV of 39.2

    The 3.6 is to convert from Joules.

Sign In or Register to comment.