โMay-02-2019 12:54 PM
โMay-12-2019 09:14 AM
โMay-12-2019 09:03 AM
โMay-04-2019 11:09 AM
โMay-04-2019 10:49 AM
โMay-04-2019 06:01 AM
โMay-04-2019 05:56 AM
JD5150 wrote:adamis wrote:JD5150 wrote:
I have worked around air to water heat exchangers most of my life. Hot air from engine exhaust blowing on a stainless or copper coil to heat water at 600 psi around 2 gallons or more a minute.
The idea you have most likely will not work. Someone mentioned that a 12 gallon RV water heater is around 12,000 btu. So lets say a 6 gallon one is 6,000 btu. By the time you use air flow/fan to blow the heat you will be down to 3,000 btu or less. The fan will cool the air some so there will be some loss of heat there from fan picking up cooler air and blowing through the radiator coil.
I just started looking at the Truma Combi eco plus. I'm still studying it to see how much juice it will take to run in electric and gas mode. I want to run it off solar and a 200 amp hour lithium battery pack plus gas if needed. It will do both at the same time
The lower BTU output actually works to my advantage in this scenario. An Atwood 8 Gallon water heater is 8,800 BTUs, an Atwood Furnace is 35,000 BTUs. I don't need 35,000 BTUs constantly, there is a cycle time involved or I will be cooked out of the camper. Having a constant 8,800 BTUs burning with a lower fan speed and lower overall heat level but over a longer running time can have the equivalent effect as a blast furnace running for shorter periods of time.
Lower BTU then it should work. Are you going to use a 12 or 110 volt pump to move the water through the heat exchanger? If so you can find pumps that can handle 140 degrees without damage. There are very few that can handle 180 degrees without damage.
โMay-03-2019 03:24 PM
adamis wrote:JD5150 wrote:
I have worked around air to water heat exchangers most of my life. Hot air from engine exhaust blowing on a stainless or copper coil to heat water at 600 psi around 2 gallons or more a minute.
The idea you have most likely will not work. Someone mentioned that a 12 gallon RV water heater is around 12,000 btu. So lets say a 6 gallon one is 6,000 btu. By the time you use air flow/fan to blow the heat you will be down to 3,000 btu or less. The fan will cool the air some so there will be some loss of heat there from fan picking up cooler air and blowing through the radiator coil.
I just started looking at the Truma Combi eco plus. I'm still studying it to see how much juice it will take to run in electric and gas mode. I want to run it off solar and a 200 amp hour lithium battery pack plus gas if needed. It will do both at the same time
The lower BTU output actually works to my advantage in this scenario. An Atwood 8 Gallon water heater is 8,800 BTUs, an Atwood Furnace is 35,000 BTUs. I don't need 35,000 BTUs constantly, there is a cycle time involved or I will be cooked out of the camper. Having a constant 8,800 BTUs burning with a lower fan speed and lower overall heat level but over a longer running time can have the equivalent effect as a blast furnace running for shorter periods of time.
โMay-03-2019 09:29 AM
โMay-03-2019 09:10 AM
toddb wrote:
I built a hydronic system in my old toy hauler. I started out using the water heater and then switched to a stand alone atwood water heater filled with glycol. It worked amazingly well, camped often to freezing and it maintained 65 in the trailer with a 50% duty cycle. The output was 140*, was really quiet, and didn't dry out the air in the trailer.
I'm currently collecting parts to utilize the water heater in the TC. Using the water in the tank is a bad idea, the anode crude plugs everything up. My plan is to pull the water heater and wrap a coil around it, topsflo circulation pump and 120mm fan/pc radiator. We use a use a similar setup at work to cool compressor heads, not super efficient but it does transfer a good deal of heat.
โMay-03-2019 08:00 AM
โMay-03-2019 06:25 AM
โMay-03-2019 03:58 AM
โMay-02-2019 06:52 PM
JD5150 wrote:
I have worked around air to water heat exchangers most of my life. Hot air from engine exhaust blowing on a stainless or copper coil to heat water at 600 psi around 2 gallons or more a minute.
The idea you have most likely will not work. Someone mentioned that a 12 gallon RV water heater is around 12,000 btu. So lets say a 6 gallon one is 6,000 btu. By the time you use air flow/fan to blow the heat you will be down to 3,000 btu or less. The fan will cool the air some so there will be some loss of heat there from fan picking up cooler air and blowing through the radiator coil.
I just started looking at the Truma Combi eco plus. I'm still studying it to see how much juice it will take to run in electric and gas mode. I want to run it off solar and a 200 amp hour lithium battery pack plus gas if needed. It will do both at the same time
โMay-02-2019 06:06 PM