09-21-11, 03:08 PM | #951 | |
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Quote:
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The Following User Says Thank You to kb1 For This Useful Post: | Geo NR Gee (09-22-11) |
09-27-11, 02:50 PM | #952 |
Journeyman EcoRenovator
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Kb1,
I contacted a few folks over there at the Machinists site. Thanks for that. They mentioned it would be better to have a sub adapter made that would work for the tricone bit instead of making it myself. After talking to a couple of machinists, they quoted me at $600 for the sub adapter. Thats not in Not in my budget. So, it looks like back to plan A. I will post pictures after its done. |
10-24-11, 01:35 PM | #953 | ||
Supreme EcoRenovator
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Info Regarding R-290...
There is an interesting site called HVAC Talk that I read from time to time. In spite of the fact that they are generally DIY UN-FRIENDLY, useful information can be found mixed in with all forms of personal prejudice, so picking the useful from the useless is part of the challenge.
There is a thread regarding the use of R-290 (propane) as a refrigerant... Most of the thread is filled with dire warnings of certain catastrophe, posted by people who obviously had no actual experience using R-290. Then this post appeared in the thread (picking the useful from the useless is still part of the challenge): Quote:
Quote:
-AC_Hacker
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I'm not an HVAC technician. In fact, I'm barely even a hacker... |
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10-26-11, 12:09 PM | #954 |
Helper EcoRenovator
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Thanks for that A/C H! It kinda confirms my thinking.
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TomS |
10-29-11, 07:00 PM | #955 |
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Geo-Column... Direct exchange idea I found
I found this website with a direct exchange idea that I haven't seen posted here or anywhere else for that matter. It doesn't look like the company is building a product yet, but it might be simple enough that someone could put together something like it.
wwwDOTgeoenergyusaDOTcom/column.htm Later hacknslash Oregon Last edited by hacknslash; 10-29-11 at 10:17 PM.. |
10-29-11, 08:17 PM | #956 |
Lex Parsimoniae
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"The field model of the GeoColumn is a factory sealed and tested, rigid HDPE containment vessel that is 24 inches in inside diameter, 28 inches in outside diameter and 20 feet in overall length. This vessel contains a copper tube refrigerant gas heat exchanger submerged in pure, unconditioned water; thus it is a hybrid direct exchange system but with unique properties. " GeoEnergy Enterprises A few of those in my backyard would work fine. Since my ground water is very near the surface. "One column is required per ton of conditioning in most soil conditions therefore an average home requiring 3 tons of heating and cooling capacity would require only 3 GeoColumns to be installed to allow access to geothermal efficiency and advantages." Dang, I would need 4 columns, since I've got 4 tons of Sanyo running.. I guess maybe I'll stick to stealing the heat out of the air.. |
10-29-11, 09:39 PM | #957 | |
Supreme EcoRenovator
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Questionable DIY Potential
Since this is a homemade heat pump thread, I feel obligated to look at this through that lens.
I find that this idea may be worth discussing, but not in a thread that is dedicated to DIY. The web page that is referred to states: Quote:
This thread is not for sci-fi, it is for things we can actually make or modify ourselves. -AC_Hacker
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10-29-11, 10:35 PM | #958 |
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Geo-Column...
Getting rid of the parasitic pumping losses is really nice, but the more I look at the Geo Column, I'm not liking it.
It would probably work well for cooling a house in the summer. But for heating, you would turn that container into an ice ball pretty quick and you'd eliminate the advantage of geothermal which is stable ground heat above the freezing point. You might as well be using an Air source heatpump, unless you live in a really cold climate then maybe. |
10-29-11, 11:02 PM | #959 |
Lex Parsimoniae
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I looked at the column as something that could be scaled down to a DIYer size.
If you could use 20 foot pipes with a much smaller OD, (4"?) and connect a bunch of them parallel, they might be useful in high water-table areas.. Like my backyard! ATS Irrigation Aluminum Pipe Edit: I wonder what would cost more, digging slinky ditches 8 or 10 feet deep? Or drilling 15 or 20 holes.. 10"x20' ?? In the end, the ditches would likely be cheaper. Plus, the added cost of building the 20 foot tubes wouldn't be worthwhile.. Last edited by Xringer; 11-03-11 at 04:22 PM.. Reason: comments.. |
11-02-11, 09:48 PM | #960 |
Helper EcoRenovator
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Do you have a drawing of what you want? I might be able to do something
K |
Tags |
air conditioner, diy, gshp, heat pump, homemade |
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