I already know this is a hotly debated topic, so maybe I'm wasting my time starting this thread but after all of the reading from closed contractor forums I've noticed they never discuss how an open radiant heating system prevents stagnating hot water.
For those that don't know this is done by always feeding fresh water from the street into the radiant loops before they reach the hot water heater where it then proceeds to the fixture, (shower, sink, dishwasher, etc.). This happens regardless of the season, regardless if the radiant heat is running.
So my question is, how is this all that different from a normal DHW tank? Or the popular circulator loops for instant hot water at your fixtures? The water will cycle hot and cold but it is always heated before it reaches your fixture.
Here are a couple links to open designs if I haven't described the design very well.
http://www.radiantec.com/about-radiant-heating/open-direct-system/
http://www.radiantcompany.com/system/opensystem/
For those that don't know this is done by always feeding fresh water from the street into the radiant loops before they reach the hot water heater where it then proceeds to the fixture, (shower, sink, dishwasher, etc.). This happens regardless of the season, regardless if the radiant heat is running.
So my question is, how is this all that different from a normal DHW tank? Or the popular circulator loops for instant hot water at your fixtures? The water will cycle hot and cold but it is always heated before it reaches your fixture.
Here are a couple links to open designs if I haven't described the design very well.
http://www.radiantec.com/about-radiant-heating/open-direct-system/
http://www.radiantcompany.com/system/opensystem/
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