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1) So my first question is, if i put in a megaflow would I have to buy a dual coil on and get rid of any pre-warm?1) You will need a dual coil Megaflo, but you can still have pre-heat & perhaps one of the existing tanks can be reconfigured to do this.
2) Is there some other way that the solar could pre-warm the water going into the megaflow such as a Thermal store (is this a good idea?)
3) I have 5 bar do I need to worry about stratification (I have seen it mentioned) what should I do?
4) And this is where is gets interesting - I am installing an indoor pool in about 6 months - is the solar better for the domestic hot water or the pool? Both will have gas boilers but I just want to know where you think the energy is best used?
5) If i do use it for the pool which i think would be best as it does not involve storing (which by definition means wastage) How would I do it?
Posted By: narcosiAm I right in thinking that your suggestion in 2) David is to reverse one of the existing tanks and run the mains water feed to the megaflow through the coil in one of the tanks and run the solar through the outside of it?Yes. Or if it has two coils, you can run the mains water feed through one & the solar through the other.
Posted By: narcosiWill the coil take mains pressure? and will the outside work at a pressure which the solar can operate at?That depends upon the coil & your mains pressure, but the coil will be designed to work in a sealed system & should be able to operate safely at 2 bar. If there are two coils the pre-heater tank itself can be vented. If you connect the solar directly to the tank then you'll need a lot of glycol solution. Check the cost of this before deciding on the configuration.
Posted By: narcosiIf I did this on its own without a second coil in the megaflow, am I too assume I would be wasting much of the solar heat?No, but on a hot day you want the system to prioritise sending hot water directly to the Megaflo, to avoid the boiler kicking in. Sending it only to the pre-heater tank increases the likelihood that the panels will be hotter than the storage tank because the pre-heater tank will be at a lower temperature than the Megaflo. However, it doesn't maximise the amount of useful hot water. In other words, you can end up with lots of luke warm water in the pre-heater tank which means the gas boiler still runs in the summer.
Posted By: narcosiAs for the pool my A-Level physics would tell me that heat exchanging with a large volume of water at between 20 and 30 deg (the pool) would get the most out of the panels as there will be little if any wastage and there will never be enough from the 2 panels I have to heat the pool entirely.Yes, this is true. You have maximised the amount of energy collected by the solar panels by minimising the temperature of the store, but that isn't the same thing as maximising the amount of useful hot water & minimising the gas boiler consumption. This depends also on the temperature you keep the pool at, the temperature you keep the DHW at, the times when you draw most DHW, the strategy for controlling the solar thermal system & probably a whole load of other things.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughPosted By: narcosiAm I right in thinking that your suggestion in 2) David is to reverse one of the existing tanks and run the mains water feed to the megaflow through the coil in one of the tanks and run the solar through the outside of it?Yes. Or if it has two coils, you can run the mains water feed through one & the solar through the other.
Posted By: narcosiWill the coil take mains pressure? and will the outside work at a pressure which the solar can operate at?That depends upon the coil & your mains pressure, but the coil will be designed to work in a sealed system & should be able to operate safely at 2 bar. If there are two coils the pre-heater tank itself can be vented. If you connect the solar directly to the tank then you'll need a lot of glycol solution. Check the cost of this before deciding on the configuration.
Posted By: narcosiIf I did this on its own without a second coil in the megaflow, am I too assume I would be wasting much of the solar heat?No, but on a hot day you want the system to prioritise sending hot water directly to the Megaflo, to avoid the boiler kicking in. Sending it only to the pre-heater tank increases the likelihood that the panels will be hotter than the storage tank because the pre-heater tank will be at a lower temperature than the Megaflo. However, it doesn't maximise the amount of useful hot water. In other words, you can end up with lots of luke warm water in the pre-heater tank which means the gas boiler still runs in the summer.
Posted By: narcosiAs for the pool my A-Level physics would tell me that heat exchanging with a large volume of water at between 20 and 30 deg (the pool) would get the most out of the panels as there will be little if any wastage and there will never be enough from the 2 panels I have to heat the pool entirely.Yes, this is true. You have maximised the amount of energy collected by the solar panels by minimising the temperature of the store, but that isn't the same thing as maximising the amount of useful hot water & minimising the gas boiler consumption. This depends also on the temperature you keep the pool at, the temperature you keep the DHW at, the times when you draw most DHW, the strategy for controlling the solar thermal system & probably a whole load of other things.
David
Posted By: wookeyLots of good advice from David, so I will just add that 2 panels will probably provide a useful fraction of your hot water, but not much more, especially if you are a 'huge fan of powerful showers'. To heat the pool usefully (unless it is tiny) requires more area than that. Numbers like 6 or more are more usual.
As for cost-effectiveness you need some numbers - how much energy do you use on DHW, how much on pool heating. To what degree is pool heating optional (i.e you'd heat it hotter if there was solar, but not if you had to pay for the gas)?
The Navitron forum has a great deal of info on this, especially from a couple of years back (when solar thermal was popular, before the great PV obsession :-)
There are combined systems optimised for pool+DHW use, but as David says they do compete to some degree due to 25C vs 55C nominal operation points.
Posted By: narcosiIf you did this what would be in the tank its self? I have one tall tank with one coil which is the pre-warmer now and one which has two coils which is the main tank now.If you used the existing twin coil main tank as the pre-heater then you just need to fill it using the existing header tank in the loft.
Posted By: narcosiIf you use the two coils as suggested, what goes in the tank its self? What is glycol for?.Glycol is an anti-freeze used to stop the water in the solar panels freezing.
Posted By: narcosiWhy would the preheat tank be at a lower temperature? surely the panels would just keep heating it and the gas would top up the megaflow if needed.
Posted By: davidfreeborough
Its not just about extracting the maximum amount of energy from the solar panels. Its also about getting that energy in the most useful form.
David
Posted By: narcosi1) Do we all think this will work?1) Yes.
2) Do we think the mains water will pick up much temp as it goes through the pre-warmer?
3) Do I need to call in a solar guy to look at any reprogramming and biasing the system to the megaflow?
4) should i look at when the gas comes on? surely if the gas heats the tank in the morning as it would in a normal house then the solar will have nothing to do during the day.
Posted By: davidfreeborough4) This comes back to my point about when you use your DHW. Ideally you want to keep the gas boiler as back-up. This means it shouldn't be set to fully-charge the tank first thing in the morning or come on at all during the day. Best to keep baths/showers to either early morning or late evening & just run the gas boiler for an hour beforehand, leaving the solar to re-charge the tank.
David
Posted By: narcosiIf there are two coils the pre-heater tank itself can be vented. If you connect the solar directly to the tank then you'll need a lot of glycol solution. Check the cost of this before deciding on the configuration.
Posted By: narcosimy plan does not involved a vented solar system now, the solar will run through the coil and I assume stay at the 2Bar it is at now. Will I still need glycol?Yes, but not as much as if you'd used it to fill the tank. The only way to avoid the need for glycol is to use a drain back system which empties the solar panels overnight.
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