I think the question you SHOULD be asking is: Will It Float?do you think it will insulate us from the Pacific Ocean

...Will the diesel engines run all the time? If so, you probably will not need any heat to supplement them. You should be able to draw enough BTUs off the diesel coolant system to keep things nice and warm...
That's what I was thinking. Of course the 53" of insulation is just underneath the slab. The other 5 (or more, since I'm not clear on the shape) sides probably won't have that sort of R value.![]()
The manufacturer of the engines should be able to tell you how much heat the engine(s) will throw off ... but I would be really surprised if it wouldn't be MORE than enough to heat your space.
How big is the space to heat? If you insulate the walls and ceilings, make then as airtight as possible ... you might be fine.
What is the lowest anticipated outside air temps?
You can usually follow the "rule of thirds" with diesel engines.
Of the heat generated from the burning fuel:
1/3rd goes to making the crankshaft spin
1/3rd goes to the cooling system
1/3rd goes out the exhaust
A gallon of diesel fuel has 139,000 BTUs of thermal energy in it. If the heat recovery system can take heat from both the cooling system and exhaust system, you'd be wasting very little of the fuel being burned.
A local high school went full on co-gen in the '70s with NG powered generators, full on heat recovery on the cooling system and the exhaust used to heat the building and COOL the building with waste heat absorbtion chiller.
They took it all out 15 years ago (about year 30) when the head of maintenance retired as on one else was going to be able to keep it all running. Their combined energy bill went up $10,000 per year immediately...and that was after replacing all the boilers and chillers with brand new equipment.
If you have need for the heat output...there's just nothing more efficient than a properly engineered co-generation system. BUT...it does have maintenance requirements.
permanently anchored in one spotEven if only 25% of the BTUs in the fuel goes to the cooling system, I'll bet that there will be MORE than enough heat to keep this thing heated. Does it travel all the time? or does it sit? If it sits it probably needs electricity ... the generator could also provide heat when that happens.
engineered to the inch of flotation this float needs to float with decks at 23" to be even with existing floats.On something of that magnitude you have no engineering on it? You should be scouring your engineered prints for specs..........
engineered to the inch of flotation this float needs to float with decks at 23" to be even with existing floats.
I think some people don't get this thread was a rhetorical question and that this is a commercial build with plans, specs, engineering etc, not you in your backyard building it from YouTube and the GJ forum.
Looks good I tried Googling it but it more brings up the hunting fishing side and not much of the building unfortunately. Wish there was a walk through of the building/float with full mech areas etc.
Brian
On something of that magnitude you have no engineering on it? You should be scouring your engineered prints for specs..........
For those interested poured interior floors and walls Saturday unfortunately had to stop the pour before the outer decks got poured due to snow.
Saw something like this on TV recently. Don't remember all of it, but is was an aluminum hull being built for a two story resort building. Crazy amount of aluminum welding. Is this the one featured on that TV show?