[Greenbuilding] [BULK] Re: Batch Water Heater Tanks?
Lawrence Lile
LLile at projsolco.com
Mon Feb 25 17:27:37 CST 2008
Lawrence Lile, PE, LEED AP
Project Solutions Engineering
________________________________
From: Lawrence Lile
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 5:24 PM
To: 'CEED Centre'
Cc: greenbuilding at listserv.repp.org
Subject: RE: [BULK] Re: [Greenbuilding] Batch Water Heater Tanks?
An old gas water heater has a handy 3" chimney up the middle. Inside
this chimney is a spiral piece of metal that makes the gases in the
chimney stir enough to exchange heat efficiently with the water.
So we took two of these old dead water heaters, and stripped off the
insulation, controls, jackets and so forth. We welded up a steel box
out of some scrap, and cut two water-heater-sized holes in the top with
a sawzall. Welded the water heaters down to the top of the box, and
made a homemade door, later replaced by a Sotz drum stove kit door. So
the firebox was directly below the water heaters, smoke has to travel
through the center chimneys. We added a length of 3" pipe to the tops
of the chimneys to increase draw. The thing stuck out the side of the
bathroom, we eventually made a little roof over it and stuck some
fiberglass around the tank. That seemed to be enough to keep things
from freezing up, and if it did, firing the tank would thaw it quick.
The wood door opened into the bathroom, so it warmed the bathroom up
some as well. In a rather chilly, uninsulated, and wood-stove only
heated house that was a plus.
We'd usually fire the thing with building scraps, since me and my
roommate worked construction jobs. So the hot water was essentially
free.
Two tanks was overkill, but we could get two baths in a row out of that
and also wash dishes. You had to watch the temperature, the water could
come out scalding very easily. Usually took about 20 minutes to heat up
from dead cold.
We could have used a drum stove kit, and cut a couple of 18" diameter
holes in the top of the drum to weld the water heaters into, but the
compound curves involved would have been interesting. Easier to cut a
circle in a rectangular box.
I can't claim this was a practical, or beautiful project, but it was
great fun to make and used scrap materials destined for the dump instead
of adding carbon to the planet's burden.
Lawrence Lile, PE, LEED AP
Project Solutions Engineering
________________________________
From: CEED Centre [mailto:frainfo at telus.net]
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 12:28 PM
To: Lawrence Lile
Subject: [BULK] Re: [Greenbuilding] Batch Water Heater Tanks?
Importance: Low
Lawrence,
I am interested in your description of the wood fired water heater but
didn't quite understand the configuration.
If I understand correctly, you use the drum with a door kit as the fire
chamber. I don't understand how the old gas water heater tanks join the
barrel or each other.
Would you mind explaining a bit further?
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