I had a thought, and in my mind it works, but before I waste my time and money I thought I'd run it by the woodboiler brain trust. I heat exclusively with my tarm, DHW currently comes off a 40G electric tank until I have time to add a superstor...now that most of my tarm is ready to go, I want to address the DHW side of my setup before winter.
I had thought about adding a 40/60 gallon superstor, and then possibly an on demand electric for when the wood isn't running (not sure if I am going to want to burn all summer).
Since a new superstor tank, and then a backup source (instant water heater) will end up costing me about $1500 when all is said and done, I was thinking about cheaper options...
A sidearm, as is often discussed here, would probably be of some help in cutting down the electric use/cost, how much I have no idea (anyone? will a sidearm actually heat a cold tank of water in reasonable amount of time? My guess is no), but what if I did the following...
Instead of adding a passive sidearm that depends on gravity flow to scavenge heat, what if I added a souped up 'sidearm/heat echanger' as follows: I would purchase a small flat-plate heat exchanger (about $100 on ebay), add it to the electric hotwater tank in the same way that a sidearm might be with DHW on one side and the boiler water on the other, use an available zone/zone valve on my distribution that would open whenever the tank dropped in temperature, and then use a small potable water pump to force circulation of the DHW thru the flat plat on one side (and the regular circs would push it through the other). Wouldn't this in effect give me a superstor tank, with an external heat exchanger, with the added benefit of having the electric kick on automatically when the woodboiler is cold?
The beauty of all of this is I already have an extra zone (with valve) ready to go because it was to be used for the superstor anyway, and two extra taco potable pumps as well...so my total cost will be about $150. Seems to easy, and too cheap...what am I missing? If this works, I may even pickup a bigger (used) DHW tank.
I had thought about adding a 40/60 gallon superstor, and then possibly an on demand electric for when the wood isn't running (not sure if I am going to want to burn all summer).
Since a new superstor tank, and then a backup source (instant water heater) will end up costing me about $1500 when all is said and done, I was thinking about cheaper options...
A sidearm, as is often discussed here, would probably be of some help in cutting down the electric use/cost, how much I have no idea (anyone? will a sidearm actually heat a cold tank of water in reasonable amount of time? My guess is no), but what if I did the following...
Instead of adding a passive sidearm that depends on gravity flow to scavenge heat, what if I added a souped up 'sidearm/heat echanger' as follows: I would purchase a small flat-plate heat exchanger (about $100 on ebay), add it to the electric hotwater tank in the same way that a sidearm might be with DHW on one side and the boiler water on the other, use an available zone/zone valve on my distribution that would open whenever the tank dropped in temperature, and then use a small potable water pump to force circulation of the DHW thru the flat plat on one side (and the regular circs would push it through the other). Wouldn't this in effect give me a superstor tank, with an external heat exchanger, with the added benefit of having the electric kick on automatically when the woodboiler is cold?
The beauty of all of this is I already have an extra zone (with valve) ready to go because it was to be used for the superstor anyway, and two extra taco potable pumps as well...so my total cost will be about $150. Seems to easy, and too cheap...what am I missing? If this works, I may even pickup a bigger (used) DHW tank.