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Forum Index : Other Stuff : how would you do it?

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CaptainBoing

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Joined: 07/09/2016
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 1983
Posted: 04:43pm 05 Jan 2022
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHqoFFh-FtA
 
Godoh
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Joined: 26/09/2020
Location: Australia
Posts: 373
Posted: 09:27pm 05 Jan 2022
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Many years ago, I made a home made woodchip heater for my hot water.
I got a 12 gallon drum, wound a coil of half inch copper pipe around it, then tightened the coil and dropped it into the drum.
Then made a funnel that went down from the top of the drum to draw air in and push the flames in the drum out onto the coil.
Cut a hole and put a flue pipe out the back from the top.
This setup made a full bath of hot water from a small box of kindling.
If i did not turn the water on straight away it made steam for about 5 minutes until the water cooled the setup down.
If I had kept the water flow down lower, I probably would have got steam instead of hot water.
Worked great for me.
I am not sure about the plumbing of that fellow, lots of leaks and using O rings for steam may not be the best option.
Pete
 
Warpspeed
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Joined: 09/08/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 4406
Posted: 09:35am 06 Jan 2022
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How would I do it ?

I think I would have my steam boiler tank, sitting next to a cold water tank of about the same height.
Then connect the bottom of both tanks together, and also a second connection below the high water mark in both tanks.

The pressure and the water levels in both tanks will always be the same, because they are directly connected.

If the interconnecting pipes are kept suitably small, particularly the upper pipe (quarter inch?) there will be very little thermosiphoning going on, although there will probably be some unavoidable but very small heat loss into the cold tank.

The cold tank can then have a standard dunny float valve that will not suffer any grief from an excess of temperature.

There are probably much better ways, but that is my best shot at it right now.
Cheers,  Tony.
 
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