sundug: "I have had a PV pumped solar water heater on my roof for over 18 years, it is a closed loop, and uses propylene glycol antifreeze, which can be damaged by high temps. Since the PV powers the circulation pump whenever the sun shines, stagnation of the collector is not a problem. I have never had water temps over 165*F, since I sized the storage to collector area correctly."
The problem I see is that I want to use solar panels to heat my house (santa fe, NM). Thats were I would get a huge benefit. For me, space heating costs in the winter far exceed any other energy costs (other then gas for my car). The temperature fluctuations here are crazy. freezing one morning and 65 in the afternoon. Sizing the system for heating in the winter is a huge mismatch for summer hot water heating.
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Sundug- I suggest that you seperate the domestic water heating from the space heating systems. water heating is a daily need, space heating seasonal. Consider using vertical air collectors for winter space heating, and placing the domestic solar collector at a steep angle to improve winter collection, and lessen the chance of summer overheating. Forget polycarbonate and hot water-it breaks down. Don't worry about propylene glycol's viscosity. I suggest you join us at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SimplySolar/ we have been group thinking plastic collectors, and can help you avoid mistakes already made. Doug
The problem I see is that I want to use solar panels to heat my house (santa fe, NM). Thats were I would get a huge benefit. For me, space heating costs in the winter far exceed any other energy costs (other then gas for my car). The temperature fluctuations here are crazy. freezing one morning and 65 in the afternoon. Sizing the system for heating in the winter is a huge mismatch for summer hot water heating.
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Sundug- I suggest that you seperate the domestic water heating from the space heating systems. water heating is a daily need, space heating seasonal. Consider using vertical air collectors for winter space heating, and placing the domestic solar collector at a steep angle to improve winter collection, and lessen the chance of summer overheating. Forget polycarbonate and hot water-it breaks down. Don't worry about propylene glycol's viscosity. I suggest you join us at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SimplySolar/ we have been group thinking plastic collectors, and can help you avoid mistakes already made. Doug
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