OP
pauldreed
--- It's because it's dark!PV is dead. RIP PV :- (
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Discuss Immersion Heater - PV electricity in the Central Heating Systems area at ElectriciansForums.net
--- It's because it's dark!PV is dead. RIP PV :- (
Hi, Ive been dircted to this thread from a discussion on the PV forum and have spent hours sifting through all the pages and some very interesting idea. I'm a little confused about your CT's and wondered if could you elaborate a bit on how everything is connected in your system. Do you simply have one CU with PV fed in via RCBO and immersion fed from MCB or is the immersion feed separated off from the CU. I've been trying to work out what the result is from your CT set up with up one on PV+Incoming and another on the PV?
I've currently got everything connected into the CU so have thought of putting a CT around all the house circuits (excluding immersion) and another on the PV thereby enabling me to calculate the excess power or maybe adding a Henley block to my set up to keep everything separate but is your method a cunning way to get round all that?
Its probably all very simple but its late and my brains dead
Cheers
John
Hi Guys
I am going to have an extra long immersion heater made. 3 KW but 48 '' long. The majority of heat will be biased at the lower end. As some of us are now getting free hot water it makes sense to try and use the whole tank. If anybody else is interested in one let me know because the more they make in one go the cheaper it will be for all of us. I have asked for a quote for one and five units to see what the difference is. It must be better than drilling into the side of the tank and risking damaging the whole thing.
I have just changed mine from a 27 to a 36 and only just got away with it beacuse it goes in at a slight angle. 48 would hit the boiler coil. An immersion coil where the heat is applied lower down would be of great interest.
Good idea....I like your lateral thinking....Rather than using an extra long immersion, have you considered using a pump to simply circulate the water around the cylinder, T off from the H/W outlet at the top of the cylinder and route via a pump and a non return valve down to the C/W input at the bottom of the cylinder, switch the pump on whenever there is enough excess PV power to run the pump and immersion.
Rather than using an extra long immersion, have you considered using a pump to simply circulate the water around the cylinder, T off from the H/W outlet at the top of the cylinder and route via a pump and a non return valve down to the C/W input at the bottom of the cylinder, switch the pump on whenever there is enough excess PV power to run the pump and immersion.
Excellent idea
probably a good idea to have a non return valve in the C/W input as well to prevent possiblity of pushing hot water into the cold system.
Rather than using an extra long immersion, have you considered using a pump to simply circulate the water around the cylinder, T off from the H/W outlet at the top of the cylinder and route via a pump and a non return valve down to the C/W input at the bottom of the cylinder, switch the pump on whenever there is enough excess PV power to run the pump and immersion.
Hi well done for the abstract thought. I have just had the quote. £150 + vat for 48'' with 6'' dead zone. Hmm quite a lot really. The pump would need to be controlled carefully so that you didn't disperse useable heat if it was a low pv day.
How would that work?There's actually no head to overcome - just a minute difference in pressure caused by the difference in water density. An alternative would be to have a short piece of large diameter tube from the bottom of the element to the bottom of the tank, which would result in the water from the bottom being drawn up, but that isn't controllable.
I don't know if different 'power' pumps are available, but I would think it would only need a low flow rate to effectively circulate the water as there is only about a metre head of water and short pipe runs.
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