Don't know if anyone here has dabbled with diy solar thermal?
We are extending and remodelling our house and as part of it will be re-doing hot water system.
We will have a hot water cylinder in loft space (bungalow) heated by immersion heater(s).
I have also acquired a second pressurized hot water cylinder which has a coil as would be used by a boiler.
So I had in mind putting the second cylinder in series with the main cylinder, so the cold water supply to the main cylinder passes through the second cylinder first. Then I would heat this second cylinder using thermal solar. So it would effectively be pre-heating the water before it enters the main cylinder. Thus reducing the work the immersion heater has to do.
As part of the works there will be a 30 sqm flat roof extension with EPDM covering over 22mm OSB over insulation.
I had an idea of routing a 10mm groove zig-zag pattern in the OSB and laying 10mm continuous copper pipe in the groove so this would lie just under the EPDM. Maybe filling the groove with the pipe in it with resin to remove any air gaps.
On another property with EPDM flat roof I have noted that it gets really hot in the top layers of the roof, so the thinking in this design is that the solar heat on the EPDM would go into the 10mm copper, and then circulated into the coil of the pre-heat cylinder.
A pump and a controller to only run the pump when the temperature of the copper pipe is above that of the tank completes the system. (and all the usual expansion vessels, pressure relief valve - all the usual stuff on closed systems)
Clearly I'd fill the 10mm copper and its pipe with an anti-freeze mixture similar to used with heat pumps.
I can't mount normal thermal panels on the existing sloping roof as this is already full of solar PV.
I am reticent to mount off-the-shelf solar thermal panels on top of the EPDM since I don't want to pierce the EPDM and risk leakage.
Anyone any experience of solar thermal and any (constructive) criticism?
Thanks for reading...
We are extending and remodelling our house and as part of it will be re-doing hot water system.
We will have a hot water cylinder in loft space (bungalow) heated by immersion heater(s).
I have also acquired a second pressurized hot water cylinder which has a coil as would be used by a boiler.
So I had in mind putting the second cylinder in series with the main cylinder, so the cold water supply to the main cylinder passes through the second cylinder first. Then I would heat this second cylinder using thermal solar. So it would effectively be pre-heating the water before it enters the main cylinder. Thus reducing the work the immersion heater has to do.
As part of the works there will be a 30 sqm flat roof extension with EPDM covering over 22mm OSB over insulation.
I had an idea of routing a 10mm groove zig-zag pattern in the OSB and laying 10mm continuous copper pipe in the groove so this would lie just under the EPDM. Maybe filling the groove with the pipe in it with resin to remove any air gaps.
On another property with EPDM flat roof I have noted that it gets really hot in the top layers of the roof, so the thinking in this design is that the solar heat on the EPDM would go into the 10mm copper, and then circulated into the coil of the pre-heat cylinder.
A pump and a controller to only run the pump when the temperature of the copper pipe is above that of the tank completes the system. (and all the usual expansion vessels, pressure relief valve - all the usual stuff on closed systems)
Clearly I'd fill the 10mm copper and its pipe with an anti-freeze mixture similar to used with heat pumps.
I can't mount normal thermal panels on the existing sloping roof as this is already full of solar PV.
I am reticent to mount off-the-shelf solar thermal panels on top of the EPDM since I don't want to pierce the EPDM and risk leakage.
Anyone any experience of solar thermal and any (constructive) criticism?
Thanks for reading...