Brian McGowan
31st January 2019, 00:43
I have made solar air heaters and they work great. It is very easy and efficient to make heat from the sun. The problem with solar air heaters is storage. Unless you want to blow the hot air you make through a large box of rocks basically there is no real method of storage.
I intend to store heat in water when I collect more than I need. This is kind of my plan which at this point is a few brain farts, a spreadsheet and a pile of parts I need to assemble. Start with a large trashcan full of water in the basement, pump from the bottom of the trashcan through pex tubing to the collector and back into the house to the 29 ft of tube and fin I already own mounted under the joists in the basement so the heat goes up to the bottom of the floor and then dump into the top of the trashcan in the most "gentle" way possible so it will stratify in the trashcan from coldest in the bottom to warmest in the top. Drain back can happen through the small submersible 12V pump I got pretty quickly.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/DC-12V-Submersible-Pump-Immersible-Pump-Under-Water-Pump-Bath-Pump/835326283
My first collector will be a little over 8FT2 and guessing at 85% efficiency I should be able to collect around 1958BTU.
The tube and fin I have should be able to dissipate around 14500BTU. That is about what 2 collectors measuring 4x8ft should be able to collect.
As I grow the system I was thinking about dividing it up into the collection part, the storage part and the dissipation part.
The collector part would have multiple barrels connected to each other for storage with a hot barrel at one end and a cold barrel at the other.
The collection end would have a 4x8ft collector with a dedicated pump which would pump from the cold barrel through the collector into the hot barrel. More collectors could be built and added with their individual pumps.
The dissipation part would have it's own pump and would pump from the top of the hot barrel, perhaps by floating the submersible pump on a piece of foam so it stays on the top of the water, through the tube and fin and back into the cold barrel.
That is my thought at the moment. I am sure it will go through many renditions.
First thing to do is make the collector and get water pumping through it then get water pumping through the tube and fin. Growth can occur after that.
I intend to store heat in water when I collect more than I need. This is kind of my plan which at this point is a few brain farts, a spreadsheet and a pile of parts I need to assemble. Start with a large trashcan full of water in the basement, pump from the bottom of the trashcan through pex tubing to the collector and back into the house to the 29 ft of tube and fin I already own mounted under the joists in the basement so the heat goes up to the bottom of the floor and then dump into the top of the trashcan in the most "gentle" way possible so it will stratify in the trashcan from coldest in the bottom to warmest in the top. Drain back can happen through the small submersible 12V pump I got pretty quickly.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/DC-12V-Submersible-Pump-Immersible-Pump-Under-Water-Pump-Bath-Pump/835326283
My first collector will be a little over 8FT2 and guessing at 85% efficiency I should be able to collect around 1958BTU.
The tube and fin I have should be able to dissipate around 14500BTU. That is about what 2 collectors measuring 4x8ft should be able to collect.
As I grow the system I was thinking about dividing it up into the collection part, the storage part and the dissipation part.
The collector part would have multiple barrels connected to each other for storage with a hot barrel at one end and a cold barrel at the other.
The collection end would have a 4x8ft collector with a dedicated pump which would pump from the cold barrel through the collector into the hot barrel. More collectors could be built and added with their individual pumps.
The dissipation part would have it's own pump and would pump from the top of the hot barrel, perhaps by floating the submersible pump on a piece of foam so it stays on the top of the water, through the tube and fin and back into the cold barrel.
That is my thought at the moment. I am sure it will go through many renditions.
First thing to do is make the collector and get water pumping through it then get water pumping through the tube and fin. Growth can occur after that.