01-14-18, 10:44 PM | #1 |
Lurking Renovator
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Help me plan my DIY wood stove water heater
We are building a house with an insulated and hydronicly heated concrete slab as our floor and heat source. It will be heated with a propane boiler but I want to be able to hook it up to my woodstove in the future. Unfortunately the woodstove is not located beside the mechanical room so I have to run water line through the slab from the woodstove to the mechanical room. I will not be hooking up right away but I have to have the pipe in the slab before because once we pour the concrete I won’t have access to install a pipe later (obviously). What type of pipe should be used in the slab?
A few options: Pex - I’m worried pex will melt with the heat of the woodstove, Steel - I don’t really want to have threaded fittings where I can’t access them if they start leaking or something Copper - $$$$$$ What would you use? And what size should the pipe be? |
01-15-18, 03:41 AM | #2 |
Land owner
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Pex. I think it's rated to something like 150°F at 100psi.
You could always make the first 5 or 10 feet out of copper incase of a rush of really hot water. |
01-15-18, 09:47 PM | #3 |
Lurking Renovator
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I wasn’t worried about the water temp but more the steel a loop running thru the woodstove conducting heat to the pex connection. How far away from the woodstove would the pipe get hot enough to melt pex... i am looking at the Hilkoil retrofit coil if anyone on here has any experience with this type of water heater.
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01-17-18, 12:08 AM | #4 | |
Supreme EcoRenovator
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I think your concerns are well founded regarding PEX and your wood stove. PEX has a maximum temperature rating of 180 F. After that it's bursting strength drops. I have seen photos of burst PEX that was used for solar collectors.
Your gas boiler probably has built-in precautions to make sure the PEX temp doesn't get to the danger zone. I have no information about what water temperature you will get from your wood stove. But you should be aware of possible problems. In my experience, the heat from a wood stove can vary quite a bit. Quote:
Copper buried in concrete is not good either because of corrosion. Best of luck, -AC
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01-17-18, 03:30 PM | #5 |
Lurking Renovator
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So all my ideas are a no go lol.. Maybe some conduit buried under the slab with copper pipe inside... I would probably be ok with a copper-pex connection under the slab after 10-15’ if it was in a 3” conduit that I could pull out and fix if there were any issues.. I’m thinking 7/8 or 1” Copper depending on what size it come in. I don’t know if pex goes that big so I may even have to use polly
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01-17-18, 03:34 PM | #6 |
Lurking Renovator
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I’m pretty sure you only need 15-20 PSI for hydronic so I think over heating and bursting would be less of an issue but no one wants issues. I also don’t have endless funds and large diameter Copper isn’t cheap.. I probably have to go 25-30’ from the woodstove to the mech. room which isn’t ideal but it is what it is.
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10-14-20, 08:06 PM | #7 |
Helper EcoRenovator
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I am curious how this turned out. Did you go with copper?
I just want to throw out there. I live in a seventy year old house with copper pipes inside the slab (for radiators) there has never been a problem with corrosion. |
10-26-20, 08:23 PM | #8 |
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Put in a header tank on the hot side of the fire place & split the supply side line with a tee into the hot line with a water temperature controller. But the big danger is boiling the water in the firebox, that could run away and really hurt someone.
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