11-17-11, 03:34 PM | #171 |
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Thanks. I have the next experiment in mind -
and I am working on figuring out a better heat source, and hooking up a pump and tstat. My recent experiments provide me some experience with the technologies for joining PEX pipes (or just hardware) . There was a discussion here about this, and good advice to invest in a Cinch tool, that makes joining pipes a CINCH. (For unjoining, I still need to get a nipping tool :-). On one of my visits to HD, looking for a quick disconnect method for PEX, one HDer taught me how to use the SharkBite Push-Fit system. Connectors are expensive, but easily removable, moreso than the Cinch clamps. So I bought just a handful 1/2 and 3/4. The 1/2" ones work like a champ. The 3/4" ones - I have yet to get both sides of a connector to accept pipe at the same time! I'm not asking "Is it me or is it him?" - but does anyone know what *I* am doing would cause this? The HD associate showed me that these cool things fit on various kinds of pipes, making them a great fast way to transition (in my view), eg, to copper. But I have tried a few flavors of 3/4" that I have in the house, and been confounded! I tried with some of the 3/4" PEX that the plumbers used, and with some that I bought in 10' length from HD, which is thicker. Same results. Tried another SB connector, same result. I resorted to Cinch clamps for these connections, because the clock is ticking, and they only cost 50 cents/clamp, but it would be nice to be able to use the SB system for these few connections that need to change during testing. Removing cinch clamps with an angle iron is noisy at night, and the Bolt Cutter is awkward :-) Thanks Seth |
11-17-11, 04:50 PM | #172 |
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Testing floor heating for leaks using compressed air.
Hi.
Air will leak more easily than water, making air a good test tool if done right. There are a few problems though. The guidelines below should be used: Test with 0.5 (7,5 psi?) bar gauge pressure when using air. Test only for two hours Minimal pressure drops (+-0.01 bar for a short loop) is completely normal. Why? The pex is O2 proof, so it should not leak air, but the actual pex is plastic, and flexible. A high pressure will make it expand, and as a result, it will look like the pressure drops. Any hole that does not cause a significant pressure drop after two hours with 0.5 bar pressure will be too small for water to get trough anyway. Any hole made by a screw, nail or similar will leak quite a lot since the tube normally will collapse slightly around the penetration. The high pressure will make the pex expand. The O2 tight layer in the pex might take damage from expanding too much (not verified, but from at trusted source). Best way to find a leak is spraying the connectors at each end with soap water. You will see bubbles forming if there is a leak. -Ko_deZ- |
The Following User Says Thank You to Ko_deZ For This Useful Post: | pachai (11-18-11) |
11-18-11, 12:25 AM | #173 |
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I mentioned in a previous post that I am still weighing my options for a heat source for the hydronic heat.
My friend came up with a plan. He and I have the same problem - we have space that is unheated - and we have the same asset available - a steam boiler. (And we both have ground source in our long-term plans, but not this winter ) We are researching using water spray heat recovery to grab the heat that we currently expel up the flue whenever the boiler runs. If we can grab it all, the remaining vent can be plastic instead of steel! I'll post when I know more. So far, it sounds really good. Seth |
11-18-11, 02:12 AM | #174 | |
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Quote:
Condensing Water Heater -AC_Hacker
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I'm not an HVAC technician. In fact, I'm barely even a hacker... |
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12-22-11, 03:48 PM | #175 |
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Hydronic heat
I have been inching along with my floors.
(Today is the first day of winter, time to shift to Overdrive :-) I have pressure-tested PEX in the floors (mix of staple-up and embedded in tile), and last week I bought an electric water heater. Why an electric water heater? Because a liquid-liquid heat exchanger tank costs a fortune and takes time to get, and a 40 gallon tank with electric backup was cheap. I turned the thermostat down to 90, and it obeyed. I have a Bell & Gossett NRF 22 pump (110 volts), which I plan to control with a thermostat. I googled, and found a widget that takes 3-12 VDC and controls 20 amps. My primary plan for heating the water is not electric...I would like to bounce it off the group. It will be in more than one phase. 1. electric (in place already, 8 more crimps :-) By the way, Cinch connectors are great, with the Cinch tool recommended here... but I have bought a number of the shark bite push connectors, and they are cool. For "test" scenarios, like pressure testing, it's a real time saver. They sell a tool for releasing the connectors, but for someone who is a "loser" (can't find that tool this second) - "Kleins" (electricial's pliers) work fine. 2. I have a steam boiler. One 10' long pipe is right near my hot water tank. My thought is to tie 2 or 4 copper pipes to this one....so I can route the return from the hydronic system past this hot pipe. Heat transfer would be by induction. I would use a zone valve to allow water near this pipe only when temperature warrants it. The reason for hitting the heat source after the load is, the heat source might be over 180 degrees. That should not be a problem coming into the tank (40 gallons of 80 degree water), but it would be a problem to go past the heat source on the way up to the PEX. I would sort of be using the tank like a "mixing" valve. 3. My friend is building a flue heat recovery system. When it is ready, I might use it. 4. I have 3 segments of roof - a) 375 Square feet, ESE, 20 degrees, full of Photovoltaic panels. b) SSW, 45 degrees, 70 square feet not spoken for. c) NNW, 375 square feet, clear, 20 degrees. This roof is excluded from NJ's SREC program, being it faces "the wrong way", but... My thought is that roof (c) would be a fine place for some diy parabolic troughs. They can be tilted to face the sun... Dan on GreenPowerScience shows one way to make one; I have seen others; It may be a function of what materials I have. And how much time and money.... 5. I am thinking of putting pipe in the ground...but quotes to have others do it are high. 6. Another option, related to #2 - In the future, I could change my boiler's plumbing to provide near-boiling water in a copper pipe. I think my friend could make me a bushing so I could thread a 3/4" pipe through the hot water tank. If I pump near-boiling water through that, it would warm the tank. Again, as always, with a thermostat and/or acquastat. I tried to get a water heater with bolt-on elements, because that interface is easy to imitate, but could not. Standards are great, except when.... The elements (I am told) are 1" straight thread, not pipe thread. One online vendor has an adaptor. A question that comes to mind is, would this need an expansion tank? What do people do for this, other than buy a commercial one? Thanks alot. Seth |
12-23-11, 02:05 AM | #176 |
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Regarding expansion tank, yes, you certainly need one. The pressure should be between 1.6 and 2.4 bar in a floor heating system to make help make sure the pump does not cavitate. Also, you must have a pressure release valve that opens at latest 3 bar. 2.5 bar is better. With a huge amount of water, like in my 200l hwh (did the same thing as you temporarily), the pressure difference in a system varies a lot just with water temperature. I have made my own thermostat, but if you plan to up the temperature in your tank to a lot higher temperatures than the circulating, you will have temperature drops that will give you headache whenever it gets cold. Without a expansion tank there will be significant pressure changes. My friend is a plumber, and as a temporary solution he did like me, but without the expansion tank. When he opened a new circuit in the floor (concrete) he had to add quite a lot of water, about one liter, because of the cooling down of the water in the system. After a few hours, the same amount started going out from the pressure release valve, and doing so now and again for a day or so until everything was back to normal. He knows his stuff, water heating systems is his job. He said that without constant control, this system might be very expensive (new pump and such).
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01-05-12, 04:10 PM | #177 |
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Hydronic heat - getting closer
I thought I would share that I am almost
ready for a test of the system. Here's what I have (pictures eventually). A B&G circulator will pull water from the Hot side of an electric water heater. Between the tank and the pump is a Tee and a hose bib for filling. When I get to it, I will add a hose bib to a water line - with a checkvalve. The pump will push the water up to the 2nd floor utility room, where the hydronics for the 2nd floor break out. I have 4 pipes from the basement to this room, so I am using 2 up and 2 down. A 3/4x1/2x1/2 Tee splits the output of the pump. In the future, I will try to use one 1" for the return, freeing up 2 more for ascent. On the return, the two "descenders" arrive at a 3/4x1/2x1/2 Tee, to feed the COLD side of the tank. But first, a 1/2" line splits off to the expansion tank that hangs above and to the side of the water heater. I have not installed an air vent yet; I thought I would try an automatic one as mentioned in GreenBuildingTalk. I realized it needs to be in the second floor utility room, where the high point is...In fact, I may need two, because there are 2 loops there. In the future, I plan to use a thermostat (or acquastat) to route the return, either past a steam pipe or through a heat exchanger of some sort. It would be well worth it, because the old part of the house is heated with a gas fueled steam boiler. More in the future, I may put pipes in the ground for geothermal. Pipe in the ground is expensive, so I'll need to do the math. My friend said copper refrigerant lines are legal in NJ only down to ten feet. I need to check that out, (and decide if that is worth it :-) Another friend is a plumber, and knows a driller, so I will speak to them about pump and dump. I'll post results soon, (and pics also :-) Last edited by pachai; 01-05-12 at 04:11 PM.. Reason: clarified hydronics |
01-08-12, 03:00 AM | #178 |
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Experiments are fun
Experiments are fun, but it's good to
look at the tables. In about 5 hours, my floors have gone up one or two degrees. I'm checking out: 1. temperature needed to heat floors 2. flow rate needed to circulate the water and get the turbulence needed. The pump I am using is a Bell&Gossett NRF-22, which can do up to 22 GPM, and up to 15' of head. But it doesn't say it can do 22 GPM @ 15' ! NRF-22 $85 1/25 HP Up to 150 psi 0-22 GPM, 0-15' Head I am considering: NRF-36 $239.95/ each 1/6 HP up to 150 PSI 0-36 GPM 0-34' of Head I previously marked 4GPM on my chart; not sure it's right, but I can check it. PEXUniverse has a chart that says 1' head = 2PSI. I have about 20' of head = 40PSI. I'm still working on the pictures. (My pics are over 3 MB, about 30 times the permitted... :-) One question - is there a way to detect air in the lines? Or do you just have to "prove" it with procedure? I put a drain with a valve at the high point, and connected City water to the bottom, so I don't think there are many places I could have air...but not sure. One remark I saw here about needing 180 degrees...made me rethink the idea of a steam heat exchanger. The electric hot water tank is intended to be used for storage - the electric is supposed to be for backup. Seth |
01-10-12, 11:48 PM | #179 | |
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Quote:
I just noticed in the reply box that there is an 'insert image' icon.
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01-16-12, 12:21 PM | #180 | |
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Radiant Floors update
Quote:
or yes, and yes. I called Radiantec, who did not design my experimental heating system, but they supplied the staple-up plates and the PEX tubing. The answer was, yes, there is air in the lines. Radiantec sells a complete Plumbing and Mechanicals kit, which includes everything you need to get the air out. With this kit, it's easy to get the air out. I should have bough it. I was afraid I would need a bigger pump. Engineer Dan also explained to me why I don't need a bigger pump - which I had heard and forgotten - With all the air out, I am not trying to LIFT water 18-22' - rather, I am circulating water in a 450' loop. The back pressure from the water coming around is an offset to the the 22' of head. When there is air in the system, it compresses and does not provide the back pressure, so you are working with a much higher work burden on the pump. Note, I did not deliberately hold back from buying their kit; I just bought the pipes from them when needed, and then forgot to go back and design the controls. So I studied the diagrams and pictures, added a couple of valves and spigots to what I had, and googled again. Radiantec has a document on how to purge the air (which is easy with their plumbing and mechanical kit :-). I worked on this Saturday night, Sunday, sunday night... and today, I ran the pump, and it was almost completely silent. That is one measure of only water in the system. An hour or two later, I was thinking of going to the plumbing supply house, to get help with my boiler and my radiant... and I checked. The floors are HOT! (I LOVE a thermal imaging camera! :-). My friend was between permanent F/T jobs, so we discussed getting a thermal imaging camera so he could do heat loss analysis for neighbors. We never did get any paying customers, but this is an awesome tool. It still cost less than a 3-zone air conditioning system.) I can even see that the bathtub is warm where I looped the tubing in the recesses of the bathtub. |
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Tags |
diy, heat pump, hydronic, pex, radiant |
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