Bs 5410-3 • Secure
“A fairy tale,” he muttered.
But the hybrid controller watched the sensors. It saw the outdoor temperature plummet. It checked the thermal store (empty). It pinged the biofuel tank level (full of HVO from a local recycler). Then, at 6:15 AM, as Mrs. Hillingdon shuffled downstairs in her slippers, the burner lit. bs 5410-3
Arthur Pendelton ran a gloved finger over the brass nameplate. Pendelton & Sons, Heating Engineers. Est. 1947. The workshop behind him was quiet now. The racks of copper pipes were dusty, the forge cold. For seventy years, they’d installed oil boilers that roared like contented dragons in the basements of drafty English manors. But London had changed. Heat pumps whined on every new-build roof. Gas was being outlawed. And the old oil tanks were being dug up and carted away like coffins. “A fairy tale,” he muttered
“Read the spec,” he said, handing her the BS 5410-3. “Clause 5.2.1. We’re not burning diesel. We’re burning Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil. HVO. It’s a bio-waste product. Net zero carbon. And clause 8.4 says we must integrate it with a solar thermal array and a 200L thermal battery.” It checked the thermal store (empty)
They worked for three weeks. The old single-skinned steel tank in the garden was exhumed—leaking, rusty, a monument to a careless age. In its place, Arthur installed a gleaming, double-skinned, polyethylene tank with a sensor in the interstitial gap, exactly as BS 5410-3 demanded (Clause 7.4.2.3). If the inner skin wept biofuel, the outer skin would catch it, and a red light would flash on a panel in Mrs. Hillingdon’s kitchen.
“Clause 9.3.1,” Mira read aloud, holding the standard in the rain. “‘The system shall automatically switch between energy sources without user intervention, prioritizing renewable electric heat where economically and environmentally beneficial.’”