Solar Water Heater
Vacuum Tube System
Stock on this item is limited. Freight transit or local
pickup is the only option. Please email us for freight quotes and
availability.
Note: Picture shows the 30 tube unit. The 15 tube unit is
half as wide and has half the tubes.
These are the most efficient solar water heaters on the
market. Let's start off by explaining why.
There are 3 forms of heat transfer.
1. Conduction
when two objects come into contact, heat transfers between
the two surfaces. This is based on the type of materials and
contact surface area. copper is without question, the fastest heat
conducting material. These solar water heaters use copper tubing to
transmit heat from the tubes to the water manifold, which is then
collected by the water and then pumped to your water tank.
2. Convection
Convective heat transfer is caused by the flow of a fluid
over an object. there is convection caused when the water is pumped
through the solar collectors, enabling fast heat transfer and low
pumping time. what about the wind blowing over the solar collector?
No worry. These are vacuum tubes. The convection must occur
directly on the object to cause heat transfer. Wind cannot take any
heat out of the system since the vacuum tubes have a void between
the copper tubing and the outside glass.
3. Radiation
Radiation occurs all the time with any object. Heat can
travel through space through radiation. There's no stopping it. The
good news is that the radiation coming out of the solar collectors
is extremely minimal, and the radiation coming in from the sun is
extremely high due to the black shading of the vacuum tubes and
aluminum inserts.
This is the highest of quality solar collector you can get.
Copper, aluminum, vacuum tubes.
How exactly does it work?
Radiation from the sun beams into the dark
solar collectors. sunlight easily passes through glass, but as soon
as it bounces off of something that isn't glass, it turns into
infrared / heat. this heat is trapped into the tubes due to
the vacuum, and is forced to conduct into the copper tubes in the
center. the heat then travels up the solar tube and into the
manifold. Water passes through this manifold, coming into contact
with the metal in which the copper tubes are touching. Heat then
transfers to the water through conduction and convection. There is
very little heat loss since the manifold is insulated well with
polyurethane foam.
Generally, these solar collectors are used in a closed
system. They can be used year-round if a water/antifreeze mixture
is used. to heat your potable water, you just simply need to run
the hot fluid from the solar collectors through a heat exchanger to
your water tank, or a special water tank which has a heat exchanger
build into it. this is the most efficient way to acquire free,
efficient heat.
These solar tubes are made to last. they usually last an easy
10 to 20 years and pay for themselves within 2. They can also
withstand extreme weather bombardment. even if one tube breaks, the
system will not fail as the water is kept separate from the tubes.
the broke tube will also continue to function, it will just lose
heat to the surroundings since the vacuum is no longer there.
the efficiency of this system is approx. 90%. A 15 tube unit
gets about 1875 BTU/hour or 550 watts. a 30 tube unit gets about
3800 BTU/hour or 1100 watts. the system also collects heat even
when the clouds are out since some wavelengths of light pass right
through them!
What's included in this listing?
Solar Water Collector Manifold
Manifold in which solar tubes connect into. Manifold has a
1/2" NPT inlet/outlet for fluid flow. Material is aluminum with
polyurethane insulation.
15 solar Vacuum tubes (Type:
T)
Solar vacuum tubes include the vacuum tube made of glass,
heat collector, copper tubing for transferring heat to the
manifold, and aluminum sheets to aid in heat transfer within the
tubes.
Mounting Brackets
Mounting brackets for roof installation along with the
necessary screws and vacuum tube holders.
Detailed instructions for
installation
are included.
Solar Heaters Stats Table
Number of Tubes
|
15 |
Able to
dissemble?
|
yes
|
Technology
|
Heat Pipe
|
Total Length
|
1.65 m
|
Total Width
|
1.9 m
|
Gross Absorb
Area
|
3.14 m
2
|
Aperture Area
|
2.52 m
2 |
Surface Absorber
|
2.18 m
2 |
Operation
Pressure
|
8 bar / 116 psi
|
Entry Connector
Size
|
1/2" Male NPT
|
Diameter of
Condenser
|
24 mm
|
Material of
Manifold
|
Anodized Aluminum 2mm
|
Material of Heat
pipe and manifold Head
|
TU1 Copper
|
Insulation of
Manifold
|
Polyurethane
|
Slot for Thermal
Sensor
|
yes
|
Cold Resistance
|
-30
|
Liquid Capacity
|
1.4 Liters
|
Total Weight
|
39 kg / 85.8 lb
|
Max Flow Rate
|
600 L/minute
|
Stagnation
Temperature
|
300 C / 572 F
|
EN 12975 (Solar
Keymark)
|
yes
|
Efficiency
|
77%
|
Hail Resistence
|
=<25
|
Diameter of
Tubes
|
58 mm / 2.28 in
|
Glass Quality
|
Borosilicate / 3.3 (T=0.91)
|
Thickness of
Glass
|
1.7 mm / .07 in
|
Vacuum degree
|
3x10
-3 Pa
|
Absorb Rate
|
=>94%
|
Reflecting
Emission
|
<0.06
|
Coating Material
|
SS-C/Cu
|
What else will I need?
This depends on your application:
- water tank, preferrably with a built in heat exchanger
- water pump (we sell diaphragm pumps which work perfectly)
-Controller for activating pump when solar collector has
hotter fluids than the water tank
-expansion tank to prevent pressure build-up
-hose and pipe insulation
-Stand for obtaining a perfect angle for facing the sun (we
can build one for you if need be)