70cmx45cm timber 2 lengths 214 cm 2 lengths 81cm mitred grip fixed and screwed to form the frame to house your solar panel.
2 lengths of 3x5cm to support galvanised corrugated sheet sides
I standard corrugated tin roof sheet (recycle centre £5.00) overcharged me IMO J
Black foam backed reflective foil faced thermal lagging (lucky find in recycle centre £2.00) This is used on the underside of the corrugated steel sheet to prevent heat escaping from the back of the panel. (pictures to follow)
Perspex cover sheet. A used aluminium window and frame can do the same job. This is to provide a heat retaining shield to let the energy in from the sun and prevent the heat escaping from the mat black painted corrugated sheet an copper tubing carrying the domestic hot water.
2x 3meter lengths of 22 mil copper tube
6x 3 meter lengths of 15 mm copper tube
16 x 22mm reducing Tees to 15 mm middle outlet fittings
4x 22 mm elbows
2 15mm sockets to join offcuts to save on copper tubing requirements.
Make wooden frame mitre the ends, grip fix or wood glue and screw ends together
This should be made so that the corrugated sheet fits inside with ease, the bottom and top edges of the sheet are cut with tin snips and bent to a right angle. Screws can be hammered through the thin sheet to secure the top and bottom.
The 2 lengths of 3x5cm are nailed flush with the edge of the frame on both sides. The corrugated sheet is inserted and secured by hammering screws through the sheet, best done with a screw driver and hammer, then wizzed up with the powered screw driver after you have lagged the back of the sheet with the reflective foam backed lagging. This way the tin sheet secures the lagging and the sheet in one go. Allow sufficient lagging to hang over the sides of the frame so that the Perspex/ glass lid can be secured to form a nice weather proof gasket.
Once the frame is lagged and secured with screws along the sides and the snipped corrugated ends of the sheet are folded over these can be secured again by driving the screws through the thin sheet into the wooden frame with a hammer.
Now for the soldering bits n bobs.
The 22 mm tube is for the outer edge fitting inside the timber frame sides, top and bottom, with an outlet via a Tee converter at the bottom and on the top at the opposite side giving maximum distribution of the inflowing cold water (bottom) and out-flowing hot water (top opposite side)
Each corrugation on the tin sheet will have a 15 mm copper pipe joined at the top and bottom by a reducing Tee fitting. Repeat until all corrugations have a 15 mm pipe. When all the soldering is checked for leaks under pressure by linking to the mains via a jubilee clip and hose pipe or whatever method you choose and you are certain there are no leaks.
Spray paint the sheet surface and pipes with mat black heat resistant stove paint or exhaust paint. This is going to get hot quickly.
The idea is using aerosol paint we can have a very thin mat black surface to maximise heat transfer to the water inside the tubes.
Secure the Perspex / glass lid in place and couple it to either an indirect heating system or a direct heating system making sure there is an expansion tank on the system to take care of increased pressure building up as the water expands when heated and does not compress. I used plastic lugs shown in picture to secure the perspex sheets as they are prone to crack if drilled and screwed
Adequate lagging and an outside isolating stop cock and drain plug for those freezing winter nights might be a worthy consideration.
My system hopefully will run solar heated water back to my combi boiler, which fingers crossed should not have to fire up and if it does fire up will shut off once the heated water reaches the internal thermostat. Though on sunny days, we should have hot water with the boiler turned off.
Early days yet and more modifications may be required, but thought you might be interested in this project designed to supply our hot water needs.
This total build is costing under a hundred pounds!
My philosophy is if I put a hundred pounds in the bank, by the end of the year, given the pathetic interest rates and poor performance of the pound against the euro, I will probably have lost money.
Here my hundred pounds will earn me money every time we have some moderate sunlight.