Raspy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,636
- Location
- Smith Valley, Nevada
- Tractor
- NH TC29DA, F250 Tremor, Jeep Rubicon
mx,
I'm completely sympathetic with your time and money constraints. I started on my place in 2006 and won't be done for another 18 months or so. Part of the problem is I'm not in a big hurry to final, and see the taxes go up, before I'm ready to make the big move.
Fortunately, we built the guest house first and moved into that, so there is no real pressure. And I am working about 260 miles away from our new place, so it's back and forth for extended periods. As you can see from the pix, I started with a 60 X 60 steel frame building that arrived on a big truck, like an erector set. Now we are all framed and closed in, windows in, roof on, walls and ceilings framed and I have power to two sub panels. The next thing is all the mechanical systems and the front door. My door will be a 4X6 steel box tubing frame with all glass block. I've been welding and fabricating various parts. I mounted the wood stove on a wheeled cart and rolled it over to the roof penetration and fired it up. Now I can finish the stove alcove while the stove is running.
As to your temporary system to get heat, I think it's a fine idea. In fact I do it on most new construction.
If you want the absolute simplest arrangement, here it is: Get an electric water heater with the standard 4500 watt elements. This should be one you'll use later for your domestic use, so it will probably be a 40 or 50 gallon. If you want to dedicate it to the radiant, get a 30. You want a standard looking tall conventional water heater. Just a cheap one from Home Depot or whatever. Stand it next to the manifold. Remove the bottom drain and screw in a 3/4 inch galv nipple, a 3/4 tee and a second nipple. Install a pump flange on this second nipple and mount your circulator there with it's flow arrow pointing AWAY from the tank and towards the manifold. Put the drain bib into the other port on the tee you just installed. Prepare your manifold with a 3/4 copper pipe extending off the hot supply pipe a few inches. Put another 3/4 copper nipple and male adapter on the outlet side of the pump with your second flange. Connect these two nipples with 7/8 ID washing machine or dish washer (DW) drain hose and hose clamps. It's a very easy to find and cheap hose.
Now run the return from the manifold to the "hot out" fitting on top of the water heater with more copper, male adapters and DW hose.
Now pour water into the "cold" fitting on top of the water heater and fill it up. Put a cord on the circulator and plug it in. Eventually, all the air will come back to the water heater and you can keep adding water as needed. When you are sure the air is out of the loops and the pump is running quietly and circulating well, drain enough water out of the tank that the water level is down a few inches from the top of the inner tank. Just eyeball it. Cap off that "cold" nipple.
Adjust the thermostat on the tank to about 90 degrees or so and wire it up. Send it power and you are done. The floor will come up and stabilize. Ideally, you'll get about 70-75 degree average floor temp and the water heater element will cycle occasionally. Fiddle with the thermostat and the loop balancing valves to get what you want. There is a slim possibility you'll have trouble with the element, but that's OK. The ones that come with water heaters are very cheap with minimum surface area and you can get a much better replacement one that won't fail, if needed. That's it. Works very well.
You need the circulator anyway and you haven't damaged the water heater, so it can go into the house for domestic use later. If this arrangement will be used for an extended period, you should get a bronze or stainless pump, designed for use in open loop systems, and bronze flanges. But if it's only a couple of months or so don't bother with the bronze.
By the way, I enjoyed your last post. Cool.
Ooooops, Forgot one thing!
Remove the cold nipple, and dip tube from the water heater. Replace with another 3/4 galv nipple. Keep the removed nipple and dip tube for later.
I'm completely sympathetic with your time and money constraints. I started on my place in 2006 and won't be done for another 18 months or so. Part of the problem is I'm not in a big hurry to final, and see the taxes go up, before I'm ready to make the big move.
Fortunately, we built the guest house first and moved into that, so there is no real pressure. And I am working about 260 miles away from our new place, so it's back and forth for extended periods. As you can see from the pix, I started with a 60 X 60 steel frame building that arrived on a big truck, like an erector set. Now we are all framed and closed in, windows in, roof on, walls and ceilings framed and I have power to two sub panels. The next thing is all the mechanical systems and the front door. My door will be a 4X6 steel box tubing frame with all glass block. I've been welding and fabricating various parts. I mounted the wood stove on a wheeled cart and rolled it over to the roof penetration and fired it up. Now I can finish the stove alcove while the stove is running.
As to your temporary system to get heat, I think it's a fine idea. In fact I do it on most new construction.
If you want the absolute simplest arrangement, here it is: Get an electric water heater with the standard 4500 watt elements. This should be one you'll use later for your domestic use, so it will probably be a 40 or 50 gallon. If you want to dedicate it to the radiant, get a 30. You want a standard looking tall conventional water heater. Just a cheap one from Home Depot or whatever. Stand it next to the manifold. Remove the bottom drain and screw in a 3/4 inch galv nipple, a 3/4 tee and a second nipple. Install a pump flange on this second nipple and mount your circulator there with it's flow arrow pointing AWAY from the tank and towards the manifold. Put the drain bib into the other port on the tee you just installed. Prepare your manifold with a 3/4 copper pipe extending off the hot supply pipe a few inches. Put another 3/4 copper nipple and male adapter on the outlet side of the pump with your second flange. Connect these two nipples with 7/8 ID washing machine or dish washer (DW) drain hose and hose clamps. It's a very easy to find and cheap hose.
Now run the return from the manifold to the "hot out" fitting on top of the water heater with more copper, male adapters and DW hose.
Now pour water into the "cold" fitting on top of the water heater and fill it up. Put a cord on the circulator and plug it in. Eventually, all the air will come back to the water heater and you can keep adding water as needed. When you are sure the air is out of the loops and the pump is running quietly and circulating well, drain enough water out of the tank that the water level is down a few inches from the top of the inner tank. Just eyeball it. Cap off that "cold" nipple.
Adjust the thermostat on the tank to about 90 degrees or so and wire it up. Send it power and you are done. The floor will come up and stabilize. Ideally, you'll get about 70-75 degree average floor temp and the water heater element will cycle occasionally. Fiddle with the thermostat and the loop balancing valves to get what you want. There is a slim possibility you'll have trouble with the element, but that's OK. The ones that come with water heaters are very cheap with minimum surface area and you can get a much better replacement one that won't fail, if needed. That's it. Works very well.
You need the circulator anyway and you haven't damaged the water heater, so it can go into the house for domestic use later. If this arrangement will be used for an extended period, you should get a bronze or stainless pump, designed for use in open loop systems, and bronze flanges. But if it's only a couple of months or so don't bother with the bronze.
By the way, I enjoyed your last post. Cool.
Ooooops, Forgot one thing!
Remove the cold nipple, and dip tube from the water heater. Replace with another 3/4 galv nipple. Keep the removed nipple and dip tube for later.
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