Google didn't really help with this question.
I am looking at evacuated solar tubes, mainly sunmaxx tubes.
I have two roof sections that face south. The largest one (900sqft) faces south-east and is 73% efficient according to (broken link removed)
The smaller section (270sq ft) faces south-west and is 80% efficient.
Now, I have read that some people actually like to face their collectors towards the south-east to catch the morning sun to heat up their storage before showers.
I could tilt the tube rack but then that makes everything (plumbing) a bit more complicated. The collectors can also be turned within their mounts to face the sun more.
(broken link removed)
As seen in the above graph, the collectors get more efficient when the sun isn't overhead.
If I face the collectors SE, then I lose a bit of the early evening sun. But, my latitude is fairly north, so the sun should be still visible to the collectors even at the horizon. I should check tonight to see if that is the situation.
Any comments...
I am looking at evacuated solar tubes, mainly sunmaxx tubes.
I have two roof sections that face south. The largest one (900sqft) faces south-east and is 73% efficient according to (broken link removed)
The smaller section (270sq ft) faces south-west and is 80% efficient.
Now, I have read that some people actually like to face their collectors towards the south-east to catch the morning sun to heat up their storage before showers.
I could tilt the tube rack but then that makes everything (plumbing) a bit more complicated. The collectors can also be turned within their mounts to face the sun more.
(broken link removed)
As seen in the above graph, the collectors get more efficient when the sun isn't overhead.
If I face the collectors SE, then I lose a bit of the early evening sun. But, my latitude is fairly north, so the sun should be still visible to the collectors even at the horizon. I should check tonight to see if that is the situation.
Any comments...