03-14-14, 09:54 AM | #11 |
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It's counter intuitive to many people that a drain heat exchanger should be vertical, but in a vertical pipe the drain water tends to cling to the surface of the inside and cover the whole inside instead of flowing down a narrow stripe of a horizontal pipe.
Something I just found in searching for shower drain heat exchangers is this: Drain Heat Exchanger | Vandenergi.com If you took hour long showers where the floor of the shower was absorbing a lot of heat, then I think it could be worth embedding tubing in the shower floor, but I don't think you are going to end up doing much more then pulling the heat that is already in the floor out, you should also make sure that the cement doesn't have any issues with reacting with the copper or whatever type of tubing you use. |
03-15-14, 03:22 AM | #12 |
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I followed the link and I`m impressed that this technique or technology is commercially available. This type of tech in a Apartment building or highrise would save a incredible amount of energy. A family would save large over the years too.
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03-17-14, 02:52 AM | #13 |
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This thread has got me thinking of using cold water for air conditioning in 1 room, Imagine all your houses water needs being piped threw a heat exchanger for cooling, so your tap water gets warm and your room gets cooled.
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03-17-14, 10:47 AM | #14 |
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Assuming you already have low flow shower heads there won't be very many gallons of water per shower, therefore not many btus of heat transferred. On my showers I adjusted the anti scald metering until the output was all hot water and no cold mixed in, that made the water temp too hot at the shower for comfort. Then I went to the water heater and adjusted the thermostat down until it was comfortable in the shower(I think I ended up at around 105F) I am of the opinion that water only has to be warm enough for showers. There are three people in our house, including our 19 yr old daughter and we never run out of hot water for showers. Modern laundry detergents will clean well in cold water, same with dish detergents for hand washing. I believe automatic dishwashers even have their own heating element to boost water temp. Why should we heat 40 gallons of water to 130F just to cool it back down when it gets to the shower.
The rate of heat loss ( $ loss ) increases with temperature differential.
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03-17-14, 12:42 PM | #15 | |
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Quote:
The one potential downside to this practice is that it may be have a health hazard if you have a tank-style heater. legionella pneumophila bacteria It turns out that Legionella pneumophila can thrive in standing water, with temperatures between 25°C and 45°C (77°F and 113°F). If you have a tankless, demand heater, no problem, or if you have a tank system with sufficient water volume going through it, no problem. But an infrequently-accessed, cooler-running tank system (below 113°F) could see a legionella pneumophila bacteria buildup. Best, -AC
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03-17-14, 04:01 PM | #16 |
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City water will have chlorine in it to prevent that exact problem. Just beware if you are on well water or have whole house filtering that removes the chlorine. Also note that dishes won't be very clean at 105F.
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03-17-14, 04:17 PM | #17 |
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AC Hacker said: It turns out that Legionella pneumophila can thrive in standing water, with temperatures between 25°C and 45°C (77°F and 113°F).
That's good to know. I do have chlorinated water but I think I will check the temp with a thermometer and maybe bump it up a little if it really is only 105. Not young anymore, but still too young to die.
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03-17-14, 05:12 PM | #18 |
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That is one thing I do like about our tankless heater when I shower I bump it to 130 then when I am done I drop it back to 120. I put a remote to the tankless heater right buy the master bath shower\garden tub. With 0.95 energy factor it does well.
Last edited by pinballlooking; 03-18-14 at 12:26 PM.. |
03-18-14, 11:41 AM | #19 | |
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Quote:
The guy just got a coil of soft copper tubing (it already comes coiled up), and shaped it into a flat spiral which he put on the floor of his shower. Over top of this he put a nicely crafted, flat teak-wood grate, upon which he stood. Into one end of the spiral he plumbed a tube from the cold supply, and to the other end of the spiral tube, he plumbed a tube to the shower's cold supply side. It all looked rather temporary, but easy to implement and efficient. -AC
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