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    Active Solar water heating
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The solar-heated hot tub and water fountain are finally done! It took me about seven years and much head-scratching to complete this central feature of our house. Some of the elements have been in place for years, such as the large plastic stock watering tank that would serve as the tub. Rosana and I still fondly remember climbing into a variety of such stock tanks at the agricultural supply store, to discover which size would accommodate us the best. Also, our yard has sported a pile of used solar water heating panels for many years, waiting for this project's completion.

One reason that I had procrastinated in building the hot tub/fountain was that I really wasn't sure how I was going to make it work. I figured that I would need some sort of heat exchanger to t

ransfer heat produced by the panels to the water in the tub. I was imagining a big coil of copper pipe that would be immersed in the water for this purpose, but what to do with this coil when we wanted to get in the tub? A rather cumbersome proposition!

Then it suddenly dawned on me in the wee hours of the night (when I often do some of my best thinking) that I could create a mini radiant floor heater in the bottom of the tub. If I tightly coiled some of the common PEX tubing in the basin, and fixed it in place by wiring it to some 2"X2" wire mesh, this whole arrangement could be embedded in a concrete pad that would serve to transfer the heat to the water above. This concept was definitely experimental, but it seemed worth trying. Another advantage of doing this is that the extra height of this heater pad would bring the level of the bottom of the tank up to where the drain pipe was located, so it would be much easier to drain the water from the tub.

With the four large (3'X8') solar water heating panels, I knew that there would be plenty of heating capacity to heat more than just the water in the hot tub, so I was also scheming to provide domestic hot water as well. For this I had scavenged an old 40 gallon electric hot water tank from the local dump and stripped it of everything but the basic metal tank. Again, I had the problem of how to transfer the heat from the solar panels to the water in this tank. This time, I took some of the same half-inch PEX tubing and coiled it around the outside of the tank, forcing it to stay in this position by also wrapping the coiled tubing with some 2"X2" wire mesh. Then I installed this horizontally in a wooden box lined with rigid insulation and plastic, so that I could pour concrete to surround the entire affair. My idea was that the concrete would get hot from the PEX tubing, and then radiate this heat into the water in the tank. Hot water from this tank would then flow directly into the gas water heater so that it would seldom switch on.

Once these elements were in place, along with the four panels mounted on the nearby roof, I was able to connect it all with appropriate plumbing. Without getting too technical, this involved combining these elements with a pump, an expansion tank, a pressure relief valve, and miscellaneous valves and gauges to be able to charge the solar heating system with glycol so that freezing weather would not be a concern. The DC pump was powered by a solar electric panel so that it would only operate when sunlight was present; thus the glycol would only circulate on sunny days. It is much easier to write about this than to physically accomplish it, as it took several days and many modifications and help from knowledgeable friends and friendly clerks at the plumbing store.

Another major aspect of the design is a rock-work surround for the tub that goes all the way to the ceiling on the back half. I enjoy doing rockwork and had a lot of fun selecting beautiful stones for the project and mortaring them into place. This rock wall was firmly anchored into place as it went up with heavy wire secured to supports on its sides. I carefully stuffed insulating foam between the actual tub and the rockwork to keep the heat from dissipating too readily from the tub. I also grouted some nice tiles onto the concrete pad in the basin.

Rather high up in the back stone wall I created a place for water to issue forth and cascade down the face of the stones into the tub. My idea behind this little waterfall was more than aesthetic: it would also help humidify the house and distribute some of the heat from the tub water into the stones to help heat this portion of the house. I installed a small recirculating pump in the tub with a rheostat so that I could control the flow of the waterfall.

Once I got all of this done I waited with great anticipation to see if it would actually operate as intended. Much of this is experimental, so there were no guarantees! To my delight we were soon luxuriating in a steaming tub of completely solar-heated water. The domestic water was plenty hot, without the gas water heater firing up. And there was an extra benefit that the room where the pre-heat tank for the domestic hot water was located could be heated by opening the lid to the box and removing the insulation pillow to allow the concrete and water to radiate heat into the room…thus providing free space heat!

Controlling all of these features has taken some careful monitoring and further experimentation. I soon realized that the four solar water panels could actually provide more heat than necessary, especially on warm days, so I needed some way to deal with this. You can't just turn off the pump on closed-loop system like this, because the glycol would eventually boil away. My solution was to make a rolling shade cloth curtain that I could easily lower over the panels themselves to control how much sun they got. This has worked well to fine tune exactly how much heat is introduced into the system, or to completely shut it down if necessary.

With a few hundred dollars in parts and some ingenuity I have created a system that should provide pleasure, heat, humidity, and ambiance for many years to come…and all completely powered by the sun!


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