mixing valve question
I was curious how this would work, so I went looking at mixing valves online at Home Depot. I could envision how your system would work if your diversion tank was always the HOT source, then it seems your other tank would be the less hot source to dilute the temperature to a lower desired valve. But, if several days of cloudy weather prevents you from having excess load to dump into the diversion tank, what happens then? (I can see around that situation with various NO/NC valves, well labeled, and instructions for my wife to use.... perhaps there's a better way). I have assumed the mixing valve didn't also work backwards if the normally HOT source happens to be cold and the COLD source makes a better hot... either I'm wrong, or there is some special kind of mixing valve out there?
I was curious how this would work, so I went looking at mixing valves online at Home Depot. I could envision how your system would work if your diversion tank was always the HOT source, then it seems your other tank would be the less hot source to dilute the temperature to a lower desired valve. But, if several days of cloudy weather prevents you from having excess load to dump into the diversion tank, what happens then? (I can see around that situation with various NO/NC valves, well labeled, and instructions for my wife to use.... perhaps there's a better way). I have assumed the mixing valve didn't also work backwards if the normally HOT source happens to be cold and the COLD source makes a better hot... either I'm wrong, or there is some special kind of mixing valve out there?
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