mx842
Well-known member
I've been playing around with different ways to heat my shop for several years now and have almost got it to where it doing ok but would like to do a few things that would make it better.
What I have is a wood stove with a ss tank attached to the top of the stove with the exhaust going out through the center of the tank. The water goes in one end and travels around the sections and out the other end. As the water heats up and leaves the tank it rises up a section of 1" copper pipe to a 35 gal water heater. the hot water goes into the WH through the port where the pop off valve was and back to the stove through the drain port. Water leaves the WH out of the hot line through about 75 feet of 1" copper pipe to the manifold and back to the WH through the cold fitting on top of the WH.
Last season this worked pretty darn good but I want to add another WH, probably over the ceiling of the room where the manifold is. I May even hook up electric to this heater and keep the thermostat set at around 60 degrees just to keep the water from cooling all the way off like it does now over the night time. I think this extra tank of hot water will help it get through the night with some tweeks.
My question is what would be better.....to run this extra tank in series with the pipping or run it parallel to the tank like it is at the stove? The copper run to the point where I will tie to the pipping to the second tank is about 9 feet off the floor and the bottom of the second tank will be about two feet higher that that.
My thinking is if I 'T' off the hot line to the hot side port on the tank and then 'T' off the cold pipe returning to the stove it would act more as a mixing valve so to speak than a storage tank. I was think of trying it this way to see what would happen but thought about asking about it before I ran all that pipe.
The biggest problem I have is that even dumping 110 degree water in the slab the return is always to cold when it gets back to the stove and this causes problems with creosote build up. I have to rod out the stove pipe every couple days to keep the keep it drawing.
with 100 degree water going into the slab what should the temp be on the exit manifold with 1/2 pex tube and runs that ave. 230 feet......2600 feet in all. There is 11/2" of pink board under the slab and 1 in. all the way around the outside walls.
That's probably a dumb question but now the water coming out of the manifold with 100 degree water going in is around 50 degrees. the slab temp in the center of the building will get to between 55 and 60 degrees with the slab along the outside walls being around 50 to 53 degrees on ave.
Even on the coldest days last winter I could keep the slab on ave. around 45 to 50 degrees. I usually fill the stove around 8:00 at night but by 4 or 5 am it is pretty much burned out. Most of the time it still has a few coals in it and not too hard to get going again but this cool down period does make a lot of creosote.
What I have is a wood stove with a ss tank attached to the top of the stove with the exhaust going out through the center of the tank. The water goes in one end and travels around the sections and out the other end. As the water heats up and leaves the tank it rises up a section of 1" copper pipe to a 35 gal water heater. the hot water goes into the WH through the port where the pop off valve was and back to the stove through the drain port. Water leaves the WH out of the hot line through about 75 feet of 1" copper pipe to the manifold and back to the WH through the cold fitting on top of the WH.
Last season this worked pretty darn good but I want to add another WH, probably over the ceiling of the room where the manifold is. I May even hook up electric to this heater and keep the thermostat set at around 60 degrees just to keep the water from cooling all the way off like it does now over the night time. I think this extra tank of hot water will help it get through the night with some tweeks.
My question is what would be better.....to run this extra tank in series with the pipping or run it parallel to the tank like it is at the stove? The copper run to the point where I will tie to the pipping to the second tank is about 9 feet off the floor and the bottom of the second tank will be about two feet higher that that.
My thinking is if I 'T' off the hot line to the hot side port on the tank and then 'T' off the cold pipe returning to the stove it would act more as a mixing valve so to speak than a storage tank. I was think of trying it this way to see what would happen but thought about asking about it before I ran all that pipe.
The biggest problem I have is that even dumping 110 degree water in the slab the return is always to cold when it gets back to the stove and this causes problems with creosote build up. I have to rod out the stove pipe every couple days to keep the keep it drawing.
with 100 degree water going into the slab what should the temp be on the exit manifold with 1/2 pex tube and runs that ave. 230 feet......2600 feet in all. There is 11/2" of pink board under the slab and 1 in. all the way around the outside walls.
That's probably a dumb question but now the water coming out of the manifold with 100 degree water going in is around 50 degrees. the slab temp in the center of the building will get to between 55 and 60 degrees with the slab along the outside walls being around 50 to 53 degrees on ave.
Even on the coldest days last winter I could keep the slab on ave. around 45 to 50 degrees. I usually fill the stove around 8:00 at night but by 4 or 5 am it is pretty much burned out. Most of the time it still has a few coals in it and not too hard to get going again but this cool down period does make a lot of creosote.