Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: Herodotusit's going to be too much of a PITA to arrange a consistent fall across the whole array back to the store
Posted By: HerodotusSo i'm tying myself up in knots with this now. In the end the drainback option has gone by the wayside: we're using too many panels now and it's going to be too much of a PITA to arrange a consistent fall across the whole array back to the store, so we're just going to have a closed glycol-filled circuit and be done with it.... But we *are* going to be using a log boiler as a backup heat source, and this creates it's own set of problems.
AFAICT most log boiler manufacturers recommend heating the primary thermal store directly using the boiler rather than using an indirect coil. I've seem some designs from UK stove manufacturers showing an open-vented gravity-fed primary circuit heating a DHW cylinder via a coil, but these all seem designed for relatively low output back boilers in the 2-10kw range rather than a dedicated 20+kw log boiler. I'm concerned that a coil - particularly one positioned in the middle or higher of the store - is going to struggle to keep up with the heat output of the log boiler, particularly once the stop of the store starts to warm up. It seems like for both safety and efficiency reasons we'd be a lot better off pumping/gravity feeding the store water directly... does anyone have any thoughts on this?
Posted By: HerodotusDoes anyone know if there's a practical limit on how many panels you can have in series and still have drainback working effectively? Do we need to do two sets of 3 in parallel or will 6 drain ok in series?
Posted By: HerodotusOne possible compromise here is an indirect drainback system with a coil. It's not ideal because most of the efficiency benefits of drainback systems come from losing the heat exchanger component, but at least it avoids the overheating issues.
Posted By: HerodotusST is cheap here anyway: 10.8k of panels, including plumbing fittings and support framework will set you back about 1.5k euros. Obviously most of it's going to be wasted in summer
Posted By: GreenPaddyI personally don't buy a "system"No I wasn't intending to. The panels less the tubes are already mounted, the SS ribbed pipes are run less the final connections. It is the tank, pump and controller that I have been trying to find someone to offer advice on.
Posted By: GreenPaddycan I ask why you have a 20kW log boiler?
Posted By: gyrogear
Er, I don't think that that is how the floor is supposed to work...
The idea of the floor is to produce a thermal flywheel effect: if it was built right with (notably the correct level of edge insulation ), the raison d'être of the floor is to GET you through the stated "cold night"... by relying on the heat already stored in the slab.
gg
Posted By: djhIf you use the TS (or even a separate TS) for DHW then you don't have to worry about legionella.
If you use a coil in the bottom half of the TS to supply a closed-circuit UFH system then you'll answer most of your rust etc worry and a filter will fix the rest. A coil in the bottom shouldn't take heat from the top of the store, as long as it stays stratified.
So if you use a coil in the top half of the store for DHW you should be OK ordinarily. An immersion halfway up the store will provide backup for DHW, or alternatively an inline heater could be used.
Coil(s) for the solar input as well. Then the TS could be unpressurised with an open-vented stove or could be pressurised with your proposed model.
I say bottom half and top half, but sizing the volumes appropriately may mean some different ratio. Or you could have two separate TS in parallel, which some seem to prefer.