Bubbles Galore
Active member
Thank you for the links. I will check them out a bit later. You weren't kidding, there are a ton of variables to take into account. Please continue to update us on the progress.
2Biz,Maybe these links will explain Hydraulic Seperation better:
https://www.hydronicworkshop.com/shoppingcart/pages/Understand-Hydraulic-Separation.html
http://www.radiantcompany.com/heatsources/primarysecondary.shtml
You wouldn't loan out that "Key" would ya?The key is keeping the initial & ongoing expense from getting out of proportion!
mike
I've heard it's helped a lot. Now if the police come looking at a recycling yard for something reported stolen, if they find it they know right where to look for the thief. They issue checks so homeless people can't get cash for copper wire stolen from an abandoned house.I'm glad to see the recycling centers are cracking down on copper theft. They recorded my license plate number and scanned my drivers license. They also issued me a check instead of giving cash. Hopefully somewhat of a deterant to people stealing it and cashing in....
What are you using to control the pumps and on-demand heater? What are you using the sense the return lines? Are you actually measuring fluid temp or are you attaching a sensor to the outside of the return line?I'll definetly keep you posted. Testing it @ 40° temps outside yielded:
Boiler set point 140°;
Temps out to bays 110°;
Return Temps 70°-80°
Didn't take too long to get the return temps to 70°. So given this data, looks like it shouldn't be too hard to keep slab temps above freezing even down to 0°...We'll see....
It is a 4 bay (nearly 2000 sqft with aprons) but the boiler is sized for 2 more bays for when I can add 2 inbays.Mine doesn't have the outdoor reset feature. What it does have is a computer board that modulates the flow and burner (BTU Output) based on incoming water temperature and the user adjustable output temperature. Once I get a handle on what preset temperature it takes to keep the bays from freezing over, I'll be able to leave it at that temperature and the control board will modulate the burner and flow to to run as economical as it can...The colder it gets the bigger spread there will be between the temperatures of the incoming and outgoing glycol. The boiler will then step up BTU output to keep up with the colder temps coming in. Once the outside temps rise, the Takagi will automatically back off on the BTU output based on the rising incoming temps. Basically it does the same thing as yours only in a different way.
How many bays are you heating on 152K BTU? I have 4 bays and about 1600 sq ft....
BTW, at what outside air temp do you have your boiler set to come on. Right now I have both the boiler and heat tape in the trough set to come on at 35° from output 2 on the weepmizer. I'm thinking this is a little high and could come down a few degrees...
If it wasn't for the fact I bought undersized pumps to start with, I would have had about $3500.00 in it. When you do your calculations, study the flow chart graghs of the boiler/demand heater and also of the pumps and make sure you order the right size. There is also an allowance that needs figured depending on the percentage of glycol your using in the system. It in itself adds head pressure. I used Noburst mixed @ 35% which will get me freeze protection down to 0°, flow protection down to -10°, and burst protection down to -60°....The glycol alone was $350.00....Expensive stuff....Looks great! How much $$$ do you think you have tied up in this? I need to do something about my older wash. Last winter was mild and I kept my old system limping along. Not sure I will be so lucky this year. Bill P. has posted multiple times about an open system he used but I never quite understood it enough to attempt it.
It is a 4 bay (nearly 2000 sqft with aprons) but the boiler is sized for 2 more bays for when I can add 2 inbays.
I have the boiler set to come on at 33*. I figure that the temp drops slowly enough that there is no way that ice will be able to form in the +/- 15 minutes it takes for the floor to come up to temp.