In article <
038e7c27-8c37-4661...@googlegroups.com>,
Tom Kessler <
tka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> - While I'm at 20 N Lat, (103 W) I'm also at 5000 ft. We still get chilly
> days where convection losses are a factor. I haven't bought the collector
> yet. Both types are available. How to make a more informed decision?
http://www.solar-rating.org
Basically, you look at the detailed rating information for the
temperature rise fitting your application, and then you have to factor
in the price. Before THAT you may need to see if anything you have
locally available is even a rated item, if not, you are back to
guesswork. A GLAZED flat plate will handle "chilly days" just fine,
IMHO. The UNGLAZED ones are severely limited (basically only good for
swimming pool heating.)
Evacuated tubes are "neat" but some of the Chinese ones are not that
good (as with anything, they can make it look like the things that do
well, but it may not perform as well if they only went for the look) and
for DHW applications in less-extreme climates, flat plate nearly always
wins on both BTUs per area (or kWh/m**2) and on $. Or Pesos ;-)
For instance, a Heliodyne Gobi HT rates at 4.01-4.05 kWh/m**2 (glazed
flat plate) on the "clear C" condition. The worst flat plate is 0.9.
The best tubular is 3.67 The worst tubular is 1.62.
You will need to do enough reading to understand what the ratings mean -
the main thing is the A B C D E class rating, having to do with the
temperature rise over ambient - C happens to be the class for "warm
climate domestic hot water." Good evacuated tubes thrash flat plates at
class E performance, but that has little application to typical domestic
hot water, and usually costs a LOT more for the collector. At 45 N I
need to consider at least class D performance - you probably don't, or
at least not much, in a climate that never freezes.
> - recirc pump will have a thermostat. Have taco SS pump, not installed yet.
> - LP heater is conventional with 132L tank (purchased that big just in case
> of -too many visitors and cloudy days) Its also possible to buy a tube w/o
> tank collector and leverage just the boiler tank.
I'd suggest trying it with just the 132 L, or getting an extra tank NOT
on the roof that you plumb in just ahead of the LP tank (unless you have
a nice sturdy flat concrete hurricane-proof roof that can become a floor
the next time you decide to build more walls and another roof. I've seen
those houses in parts of the tropics.) Depending on how willing you are
to rework it later, you can always add more storage capacity if you find
that it runs out too soon at a given size of storage. I assume you get a
bit more cloud cover than parts north of you with the sea nearby; the
good news is that both flat plates and evacuated tubes collect some heat
even on cloudy days - not that they can do miracles. If you get some sun
nearly everyday (even if not all day) you may not need a huge storage
capacity. We get long gray stretches, so much larger storage makes more
sense here.
You'll also need (should already have with the water heater) a
temperature/pressure relief valve, in case things get way too hot. You
may find that at some times of the year or day you want to be able to
cover (shade) part of the collector, if the T/P relief is blowing off
too regularly (when you get much more sun than you need for your hot
water use.) More storage can help with that problem as well. Make sure
that the drain from that valve is directed somewhere that will not cause
problems or burn anyone if or when it goes.