kiwipaulie
Well-Known Member
Wtf is that about couple posts up lol
Hell you tell me . Lost meWtf is that about couple posts up lol
ouch 37 degree difference.... i feel your pain=/Woke up at 4am my time, house is 77F. My upstairs chiller is making so much heat that I can't shed it all, even with it being just 40F outside!
What's painful is that I've dropped $9k on a 5 Ton chiller with all the bells n whistles and it's not here yet! Next week, I'm promised.ouch 37 degree difference.... i feel your pain=/
i recently started running my stuff at night to try and keep everything in balance. works great for me cause temps in the daytime can get up to 95F=/What's painful is that I've dropped $9k on a 5 Ton chiller with all the bells n whistles and it's not here yet! Next week, I'm promised.
Then, it too will shed plenty of heat, this time into a hot water system that I can use to keep my home comfortable.
I'm expecting a record hot summer this year, so I will be prepared. Are y'all ready for the hottest summer EVER?
It has hot gas recovery, which means it sheds heat first into a hot water circuit. It then flows around my house just like hot water baseboard heat would. If this water system gets hot enough that it won't take any additional heat, the chiller will reject the excess into the air. Yes it's mounted outside, just like a heat pump.How do you plan to transfer heat from the chiller into you water heating? Are you planning on running that 5 ton chiller indoors?
Balance, indeed!i recently started running my stuff at night to try and keep everything in balance. works great for me cause temps in the daytime can get up to 95F=/
I'm excited to see what you do with COBs=]]]
Sounds like a pretty fancy chiller. Didnt know you could get a chiller with heat recovery.It has hot gas recovery, which means it sheds heat first into a hot water circuit. It then flows around my house just like hot water baseboard heat would. If this water system gets hot enough that it won't take any additional heat, the chiller will reject the excess into the air. Yes it's mounted outside, just like a heat pump.
In fact, you can think of it as a heat pump, only instead of reversing flow to go from cooling to hearing, it just has two circuits that handle cold and hot separately, full time. The two water circuits allow me to run each room individually on their own thermostats.
I spent the extra $100 or so for a 1kW electric heat strip in the cold water system. This will guarantee that even if there's no outside load on the chiller it will still drive enough heat to the hot side to guarantee home heating.Sounds like a pretty fancy chiller. Didnt know you could get a chiller with heat recovery.
Will you still need a furnace or will the chiller recover enough heat to replace it?
It's two separate circuits, so no valves. The hot water side will still come in handy for heating rooms overnight and dehuey, as well as shedding excess heat from other systems, like water cooled co2 burners. All excess heat gets shed outside, regardless of the season. Pretty darn nifty, and since it's using heat I've already paid for and paid again to move, I don't have to pay for it yet again!Come summer time though Im guessing you can valve out the recovery side and divert all the heat outdoors?
Yes but wouldnt you want to shut down the recovery side completly in the summer? Meaning why have hot water circulating through your house and adding to the heat load your trying to remove...or am I not understanding?It's two separate circuits, so no valves. The hot water side will still come in handy for heating rooms overnight and dehuey, as well as shedding excess heat from other systems, like water cooled co2 burners. All excess heat gets shed outside, regardless of the season. Pretty darn nifty, and since it's using heat I've already paid for and paid again to move, I don't have to pay for it yet again!
We've installed the hot side manifold, bought the baseboard heaters and the chiller comes with tanks and pumps for both hot and cold side circuits.Have you already plumbed the radiant heat?
The heat load won't be that much because the heat stays in the water system.Yes but wouldnt you want to shut down the recovery side completly in the summer? Meaning why have hot water circulating through your house and adding to the heat load your trying to remove...or am I not understanding?
No, Sir; fewer moving parts, just better integration with HVAC systems as opposed to the common scenario of treating building HVAC and growroom needs as if they're completely separate.Lots of moving parts...hopefully it works out for you.