The idea is to meet the needs of an application in the safest, most cost effective way, while making it as serviceable and robust as possible. All this with some regard for aesthetics. Except for safety, all the goals are somewhat interdependent.
One approach often used is to make things as simple as possible (or no more complicated than required). Another way to say that, particularly in the case of solar water heating, is to use appropriate technology.
Some solar water heating applications may require higher working temperatures and thus make the best all around use of the higher efficiencies that evacuated tube units can achieve at higher temperatures. Such applications usually have working temps. above, say, 60 deg. C. or so. Another application might be in severely cold climates where the lower (thermal) loss coeff. of evac. tube units will allow heat collection when/where (fluid temps.- amb. temps. ) commonly exceed 40 to 50 deg. C. or more.
All that however, comes at a price. At lower delta t's, a reasonably well designed flat plate collector may well outperform an evacuated tube unit. The overall loss coeff. will be higher than evac. tube, but the temp. diff. will also be lower. The small extra amount of heat gain from the evac. tube comes at a price premium, and due to added complexity, more maint. and increased probability of problems.
Usually, flat plate is a more appropriate technology (dumber) for heating water than evac. tube. Evac. tubes may be good (appropriate) for some process heating applications. DWH is low tech stuff.
Do not confuse temperature with quantity of heat. It's easier to heat 1000 kg of H2O from 20 deg. C to 60 deg. C. than it is to heat 500 kg. of H2O from 20 C. to 100 C. with either flat plate or evac. tube. The quantity of heat is the same, the quality of the energy is different. The evac. tube is probably better for the 2d application. The flat plate better for the first. Using evac. tubes for DHW applications is overkill.
You want 100 deg. (F., I assume) water in the A.M., insulate the crap out of any storage tanks. Long pipe runs that cannot be made shorter by design can be insulated more heavily. Each application has different design challenges. There are lots of tricks available before evac. tubes, most of them more cost effective.
To paraphrase your statement, evac. tubes have their place for sure, just not usually for domestic residential applications. Usually, When I see evac. tubes for DHW use, I have often found after speaking with the owners, it was done out of solar ignorance.
One approach often used is to make things as simple as possible (or no more complicated than required). Another way to say that, particularly in the case of solar water heating, is to use appropriate technology.
Some solar water heating applications may require higher working temperatures and thus make the best all around use of the higher efficiencies that evacuated tube units can achieve at higher temperatures. Such applications usually have working temps. above, say, 60 deg. C. or so. Another application might be in severely cold climates where the lower (thermal) loss coeff. of evac. tube units will allow heat collection when/where (fluid temps.- amb. temps. ) commonly exceed 40 to 50 deg. C. or more.
All that however, comes at a price. At lower delta t's, a reasonably well designed flat plate collector may well outperform an evacuated tube unit. The overall loss coeff. will be higher than evac. tube, but the temp. diff. will also be lower. The small extra amount of heat gain from the evac. tube comes at a price premium, and due to added complexity, more maint. and increased probability of problems.
Usually, flat plate is a more appropriate technology (dumber) for heating water than evac. tube. Evac. tubes may be good (appropriate) for some process heating applications. DWH is low tech stuff.
Do not confuse temperature with quantity of heat. It's easier to heat 1000 kg of H2O from 20 deg. C to 60 deg. C. than it is to heat 500 kg. of H2O from 20 C. to 100 C. with either flat plate or evac. tube. The quantity of heat is the same, the quality of the energy is different. The evac. tube is probably better for the 2d application. The flat plate better for the first. Using evac. tubes for DHW applications is overkill.
You want 100 deg. (F., I assume) water in the A.M., insulate the crap out of any storage tanks. Long pipe runs that cannot be made shorter by design can be insulated more heavily. Each application has different design challenges. There are lots of tricks available before evac. tubes, most of them more cost effective.
To paraphrase your statement, evac. tubes have their place for sure, just not usually for domestic residential applications. Usually, When I see evac. tubes for DHW use, I have often found after speaking with the owners, it was done out of solar ignorance.
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