JakeKohl
Well-known member
I think you're getting too caught up with the water temperature in the tank. Laws relating to conservation of energy applies here....energy in = energy out. The size of the tank will have little effect on the system's ability to heat your floor. The amount and temperature of pre-heated water in your tank may help to slightly jump-start the system but should be ignored.
If your tank sits with no water movement and heating elements on, it's putting in 9kw of heat into the water until the thermostat reaches its set point and turns off the heating elements. When you start pumping this hot water into the slab, the heat from that water is transferred into the slab much faster than the heating element can transfer it into the water in the tank. This is OK and is normal. You will see the water temperature drop significantly as this happens. The important thing to realize here is that the heating elements are still putting heat into the water as fast as they can even though the water is at 64 degrees. After that initial charge of water is cooled, you will not see the water temperature increase much at all because of A) the volume of water in the tank and B) the amount of water flowing in and out of the tank. A "boiler" may be a little more efficient at heating this cooler water and some people think it's more effective because the discharge temperature is higher. Fact; the discharge temperature is higher because the tank is smaller on a "boiler". The amount of heat being added to the system is still only a function of the amount of wattage into the heater and the efficiency with which it is transferred to the water regardless of water temperature.
Repeating in summary: The important thing is that the heating elements are on and are putting energy (heat) into the water. Even if the water in is 65 degrees in and 65.2 degrees out you are transferring heat into the slab. A smaller boiler will see a higher temperature water output because the tank is MUCH smaller. Do not expect to see this with your hot water tank that was really meant for a different purpose.
My point is this; let it run. Mostly ignore the water temperatures (unless they get beyond safe points) and let it run for an extended period (24 hours). Don't crank up the setpoint on the water heater, it will only help with the initial charge of water that is pumped to the slab and will have practically no effect on the overall function of the system because, again, there is too much water volume in the heater for you to notice much temperature increase on the output above the actual temperature of the slab. Increased setpoint really means that the tank will be less efficient and lose more heat energy when it sits idle (temperature difference higher between the water, and surroundings). These systems will not heat the slab in 15 minutes even with a "proper" boiler. It will need to run for the better part of a day before you see a significant change.
If your tank sits with no water movement and heating elements on, it's putting in 9kw of heat into the water until the thermostat reaches its set point and turns off the heating elements. When you start pumping this hot water into the slab, the heat from that water is transferred into the slab much faster than the heating element can transfer it into the water in the tank. This is OK and is normal. You will see the water temperature drop significantly as this happens. The important thing to realize here is that the heating elements are still putting heat into the water as fast as they can even though the water is at 64 degrees. After that initial charge of water is cooled, you will not see the water temperature increase much at all because of A) the volume of water in the tank and B) the amount of water flowing in and out of the tank. A "boiler" may be a little more efficient at heating this cooler water and some people think it's more effective because the discharge temperature is higher. Fact; the discharge temperature is higher because the tank is smaller on a "boiler". The amount of heat being added to the system is still only a function of the amount of wattage into the heater and the efficiency with which it is transferred to the water regardless of water temperature.
Repeating in summary: The important thing is that the heating elements are on and are putting energy (heat) into the water. Even if the water in is 65 degrees in and 65.2 degrees out you are transferring heat into the slab. A smaller boiler will see a higher temperature water output because the tank is MUCH smaller. Do not expect to see this with your hot water tank that was really meant for a different purpose.
My point is this; let it run. Mostly ignore the water temperatures (unless they get beyond safe points) and let it run for an extended period (24 hours). Don't crank up the setpoint on the water heater, it will only help with the initial charge of water that is pumped to the slab and will have practically no effect on the overall function of the system because, again, there is too much water volume in the heater for you to notice much temperature increase on the output above the actual temperature of the slab. Increased setpoint really means that the tank will be less efficient and lose more heat energy when it sits idle (temperature difference higher between the water, and surroundings). These systems will not heat the slab in 15 minutes even with a "proper" boiler. It will need to run for the better part of a day before you see a significant change.
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