Solar Powered Water Heater

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May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
I was thinking about this during down times last night at work.

Wouldn't it be cool if you could build a 5 gallon or 3 gallon water heater that was heated by solar panel. It would be useful for smaller boats driven by outboards or boats without heat exchangers.

If you could design it with a temperature shut off so that it would be similar to a charge regulator. Once the desired temp is obtain the panel is turned off.

If it was insulated like the water tank in my boat, it would hold hot water long after dark. If I run my engine on my Catalina 30 it heats the water and the water stays hot for most of the night and into the next morning.

There are solar water heaters out there, but the design difference that I am thinking of is one where the solar panel is your typical electric panel. It is wired to the water heating element in the water tank. This way it may be smaller. It would be even better if you could run it off of a 20 Watt panel or something similar to that size. The key would be an efficient heating element that would get hot with very little power going into it. If the tank was 3 gallon it would be small enough to heat the water at a good rate, be easily installable in a small area.

Does anyone else think that this would be possible and a money making prospect?
 

Gary_H

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Nov 5, 2007
469
Cal 2-25 Carolina Beach NC
My solar shower is some kind of vinyl plastic water bag that is clear on one side and black on the other. lay it on the deck for an hour in the sun and the water is so hot you have to mix it with cool water to use it. hang it up over your head and there is a short hose with a shower head on the bottom. works good actually.
 
Nov 6, 2006
10,048
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
The physics of this quickly tell ya why it is not done.. in rough, round numbers, A typical water heater in a boat is 1400 watts.. to heat the same water amount to the same temperature with a 20 watt electric panel would take at full output, 70 times as long.. so if it takes the shore power about 30 minutes to heat the water, the panel would take 35 hours at full output, which would require around three real world days.. That would take probably another couple of days once ya crank in heat loss overnight.. That is the problem with solar, not enough "energy density"..
 
May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
I figured that, Kloudie. It is a shame. It would be nice to have a dedicated solar panel that was small enough to work on a small boat but it would power a small solar water heater. If it was three gallons it isn't too much water to deal with but it would still take a while for the element to heat the water with current specifications.

Who knows, eventually solar may power most things as technology improves.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
You have a potential of about 24000 btu's per square meter per day in the eastern USA and about 20% more in the western USA during July. Converting that to heat depends on many factors.
 
Nov 6, 2006
10,048
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
Exactly, Ross.. the bugger is converting it to electricity and then back to heat.. If ya use a collector that looks kinda like a fridge evaporator (laid out flat and with a black anodize finish and inside an insulated frame with a glass cover), and have a little circulating pump to circulate the water between the tank and the collector, you can actually have a pretty good small solar heater in a space about twice the area of a 20 watt panel. Energy conversion is what eats up efficiency.. using a rig like that takes in heat (infra-red) and uses it directly..
 
Jul 11, 2013
56
Columbia 8.7 Potomac
The answer is a solar coil doing this job, not a solar panel.
The only electricity needed is to run the pump that pushes water through the coil.
A refrigerator coil painted black and cased in a box works great.
It's really not a crazy hard project, and pretty cheap.

You could also go with a single commercially made coil and build your system around it.

I'll try and find links.

Edit...
This is a commercially made coil...
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0041VM58E
 
Nov 19, 2011
1,489
MacGregor 26S Hampton, VA
There was an article in popular mechanics years ago about building one out of an existing tank painted black and installed in a box that opens top and front to expose a foil insulated lined box. When the sun goes down, you close the box keeping the tank warm.
 
Jul 11, 2013
56
Columbia 8.7 Potomac
There was an article in popular mechanics years ago about building one out of an existing tank painted black and installed in a box that opens top and front to expose a foil insulated lined box. When the sun goes down, you close the box keeping the tank warm.
I have a friend who built something similar for his house.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
if you have ever had a black garden hose left full of water out in the sun. You know how hot the water can get inside the hose. Fifty feet of black garden hose coiled flat in an insulated window box would serve as a good collector.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
Using 5/8 inch hose it would contain .8 gallons of water. The hose out front gets "hot" in an hour.
 
May 24, 2004
7,164
CC 30 South Florida
Why re-invent the wheel. Solar shower bags can be found for under $10 and they heat up to 5 gallons of water in a couple of hours and can be rolled up and easily stored when not in use.
 
May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
My thoughts are that it would be cool to add it to an existing fresh water system and have a pressurized system. It would be like any existing boat system where there is a hot water tank into the fresh water system so you have pressurized hot and cold water.
 

capta

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Jun 4, 2009
4,905
Pearson 530 Admiralty Bay, Bequia SVG
There are 12 volt water heater elements that work with overload shunts on wind gens. That would probably be the way to go.
When I circumnavigated, I had a 5 gallon black square chemical container which would get water very hot on a sunny day. It had a spigot on one side near the bottom and we would position it so the spigot was over the open head hatch and we could take hot showers inside the boat. No muss no fuss.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
You can wet a couple of dark color towels and place them in plastic bags in the sun. They will get hot and you can wash yourself clean with a quart of water.
 
May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
The panel is interesting, but how would you circulate the water from the tank without an expensive motor and the power consumption?
 
Mar 9, 2010
22
Beneteau 36 CC St. Augustine, FL
The panel is interesting, but how would you circulate the water from the tank without an expensive motor and the power consumption?
They sell a small circulating pump that has it's own built in solar panel. The water only circulates when the sun is out.
 
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