Wednesday, February 23, 2011
System Cost
There are a number of ways of looking at that.....so I will just give the simple answer:
$9386.00 installed (out of packet expense)
Federal 30% Tax credit: $2815.80 (received during next tax cycle)
Maryland Grant 20% capped at $1500.00 (received later this year)
Needed a new water heater anyway and was looking at the GeoSpring ($1482.94)
Effective cost $3587.26
7 year payback
The complicated answer includes inflation and electric rate increase. (5.5 year payback)
The deceptive answer also includes your tax rate and treats the expense as an investment (I don't buy into this one <5yrs).
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Usage 2-20-2011
From Solar Water Heater Data |
Mixing Valve
From My Solar Hot Water System |
Controller
From My Solar Hot Water System |
The controller measures the temperature of the panel on the roof and compares it to the temperature at the bottom of the tank. If the roof is 12F hotter than the tank, the pump will circulate warm water from the roof to the tank. When the difference shrinks to 5F, the pump stops. This cycle continues until the top of the tank reaches 160F, after which the system enters a stagnation mode where no pumping occurs.
The system will exit stagnation if tank temp drops below 156F, or if the roof temperature exceeds 240F. The latter is to protect the system from boiling or the glycol from getting heat damage. If the roof is too hot, the system will periodically pump short periods to try and keep it cool...if the storage tank gets to 190F the whole system shuts down. The system is sized so that the tank can hold all the BTUs generated by the collector in a day if the starting temp of the tank is 160F. So, it should never shut down unless there is a problem.
At night, if the tank is still above 160F, the system will run to let the excess heat radiate to the night sky until the tank is at 160F. This ensures there is enough capacity in the system to hold the next days heat.
The Pump and Controller
From My Solar Hot Water System |
The Tank
From My Solar Hot Water System |
The System
Now for the system. At the heart of the system are two solar collector panels manufactured by Alternate Energy Technologies, LLC. AET is a Florida based company that has been at the forefront of flat panel technology since 1975. Inside, they use Thermafin copper welded collector fins. For my installation we used a pair of AE-32 panels. These are 4x8 panels providing ~60 square feet of absorber area. The SRCC rating for these panels is here: http://securedb.fsec.ucf.edu/srcc/coll_detail?srcc_id=2002001E .
Here is a neat video describing the 'Thermafin' manufacturing process: