"Passive" Hot water heat

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Old 08-21-2010, 06:38 AM
2 Oldcrabs 2 Oldcrabs is offline
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Default "Passive" Hot water heat

With attic temp above 120 degrees has anyone installed a small water tank (10-20 gal) in the attic as a "preheater" to the regular hot water? Would have to be installed over a bearing wall for weight. On very hot days the regular heater may not come on.
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Old 08-21-2010, 07:47 AM
cybermuda cybermuda is offline
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Default Heat Exchanger

Not tried that, but you can fit a heat exchanger to your immersion heater that will "concentrate" the heat from your garage and reduce your water-heating bill
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Old 08-21-2010, 07:41 PM
ijusluvit ijusluvit is offline
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Not tried that, but you can fit a heat exchanger to your immersion heater that will "concentrate" the heat from your garage and reduce your water-heating bill
This sounds cool.. I mean hot.
Could you explain this setup and installation details a little further? Any idea of costs? Thanks.
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Old 08-22-2010, 07:25 AM
2 Oldcrabs 2 Oldcrabs is offline
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Default Pre-heat

Home Depot- Well tank 19 gal $150 Drip pan $19 (4) Ball valves $40 Cpvc pipe and fittings $100. ( I would use "Pex" pipe & "shark bite" fittings instead of cpvc if legal and available in Fl.) Cut the cold water line to heater and run water up in attic to the "bottom" of holding tank (put drip pan under tank). Take the top fitting of tank and return to "cold" on heater. Install 2 "stop & wastes" valves (little drain caps) on each side of holding tank. Intall a "by-pass" line and valve to use if you needed to islolate the holding tank. 19 gal of water would sit in attic heating to attic temp, ready to go in the "cold" fill of water heater. I have done this in De using basement temp (winter water temp is about 45 degrees). Cut my cost by 30 %.
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Old 08-22-2010, 07:42 AM
mulligan mulligan is offline
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How about cutting the cold feed, and running a full roll of pex clipped up to the underside of the rafters, then into the holding tank??
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Old 08-22-2010, 01:28 PM
cybermuda cybermuda is offline
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Default Cool your garage to heat your water

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Originally Posted by ijusluvit View Post
This sounds cool.. I mean hot.
Could you explain this setup and installation details a little further? Any idea of costs? Thanks.
This should explain it:

http://www.energysavers.gov/your_hom.../mytopic=12840

Some plumbing skills are needed to install it.
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Old 08-22-2010, 01:56 PM
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Default Reply to "Mulligan"

3/4" pipe holds about 2 ounces per foot. 100' roll of Pex would hold about 1.75 gals of water. Maybe 3 or 4 rolls layed flat and stack on top of each other. If I ever get to TV, it is nice to see there is at least one other Union member there. (32 yrs IBEW)
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Old 08-22-2010, 04:43 PM
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My son is IBEW, I am UBCJA, Northeast regional council. Thanks to the carpenters, I have a great retirement.
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Old 08-22-2010, 06:27 PM
ijusluvit ijusluvit is offline
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Thanks folks! Great information, and this project has made my list!
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Old 08-22-2010, 07:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2 Oldcrabs View Post
3/4" pipe holds about 2 ounces per foot. 100' roll of Pex would hold about 1.75 gals of water. Maybe 3 or 4 rolls layed flat and stack on top of each other. If I ever get to TV, it is nice to see there is at least one other Union member there. (32 yrs IBEW)
Once I get down full time I might try this too. By the way, I'm retired from the UWUA Local 464. (New England Electric / Dominion Energy)
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Old 08-22-2010, 08:24 PM
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Isn't pex insulated? Will it really save that much?
If you spring a leak, you will be looking at replacing your entire home and furnishings, pictures, computer data, and maybe get electrocuted while sleeping, all with no insurance coverage.
Not a union member, but a former member of the bar.
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Old 08-22-2010, 09:16 PM
Larryandlinda Larryandlinda is offline
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Default Brilliant Ideas - and.....

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Originally Posted by 2 Oldcrabs View Post
With attic temp above 120 degrees has anyone installed a small water tank (10-20 gal) in the attic as a "preheater" to the regular hot water? Would have to be installed over a bearing wall for weight. On very hot days the regular heater may not come on.
Great idea...
We installed solar domestic hot water in 1976 in Md and have turned on the HW heater very little.
We added PV's 6 years ago and the meter started running in reverse.
The most recent addition was groundwater loop so the device commonly known as a a money drain (heat [pump) now extracts heat from a 54 degree instead of frequent below zero air.

sine we don't use AC, summer cooling is by fan only, but we always thought that a heat exchanger could cool the place doen a bit by blowing air over 54 degree water coils?

We've got PV on our TV and Wildwood homes, but hot water seems easy.
We'll bring a couple of the old 4x8 water panel collectors and throw them on the roof or in the attic.

Here's a question we have not seen answered
Why don't more places have fans adequate to pull what would be 85-100 degree outside air through the garage (the TV Garages get very hot) into the attic, and out the top.
We have seen places with extra domes on the roofs - and are those possibly keeping the attics below 120?
Would the garage and attic then stay cooler and thus leave the living are easier to cool?

We could imagine an attic with no fans could get into the 140 range?


When in TV we rarely run the AC and heat and when we start living there more we plan to do what we do back home - use air circulation to bring air in at night and keep it in as long as we can with window control.

thanks for all the great advice and we are delighted to see fellow TV'ers concerned about energy (and money )saving
L&L
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Old 08-22-2010, 09:27 PM
pauld315 pauld315 is offline
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Not sure when you are normally in TV but I am guessing it is not summer time if you aren't using AC. I lived iin Florida for 7 years when I was in my 20's and broke. Thought I would leave the AC off as long as I could to save money. Never made it past the middle of May or so. I have lived in NC for the past 18 years and if it wasn't for AC in the summer, this state would still be a rural farming state. I wish you luck with the idea of not using AC and living in TV in the summer.
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Old 08-23-2010, 05:52 AM
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Yo larry, I worked at salem harbor, millstone, VY, and manchester st in Provivdence. We've probably met at some point.
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Old 08-23-2010, 10:24 AM
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Default agreed - a/c a necessity for me

Quote:
Originally Posted by pauld315 View Post
Not sure when you are normally in TV but I am guessing it is not summer time if you aren't using AC. I lived iin Florida for 7 years when I was in my 20's and broke. Thought I would leave the AC off as long as I could to save money. Never made it past the middle of May or so. I have lived in NC for the past 18 years and if it wasn't for AC in the summer, this state would still be a rural farming state. I wish you luck with the idea of not using AC and living in TV in the summer.
I think you're right - the whole South had big time population growth about the time a/c became a regular amenity. I lived in Houston (twice) and don't see how anyone could stand it in the summer before a/c. Guess that's when the "ladies" sat on their porches sipping lemonade and had servants to fan them (and do all the work).

Would be guessing that if you don't use your air cond., you wouldn't have to worry much about having too many houseguests or folks over for cards!
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