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Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming PoolJILLSAVES from Shavertown, PA Feedback About This Post:RE: Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming PoolI saw one on a house rooftop. It was homemade, PVC pipe, painted black to collect more solar heat. Post By K.G. (Guest Post) RE: Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming PoolThank you so much for all your help! :} Post by JILLSAVES RE: Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming Pool
Jill Post By Alan B Steele (Guest Post) RE: Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming PoolWhat a fabulous explanation! Post by Katie A. RE: Making Solar Collectors for a Swimming Pool
Build a box about 2 feet wide by 6 feet long and about 2 inches deep. Paint the inside of the box with flat black paint. Arrange 50 feet of black garden hose to lie flat in the bottom of the box. Put holes in the end of the box to bring the ends of the hose out and seal around the hose where it passes through the box with caulking compound. Secure the hose in place with several thin pieces of wood placed on top of the hose and nailed to the back of the box. Several old yard sticks would be about right for this. Paint them with the flat black paint also. Be careful not to put the nails through the hose. Don't flatten the hose, but drive the nails in just far enough so that the hose doesn't slide down when the box is stood up on end. Make a glass cover for the box. Caulk all of the joints to keep rain out of the box. Set the box up so that it is perpendicular to the sun's rays when the time is 12:00 noon, Standard Time. Get a circulating pump and hook it up so it pulls water from the pool and pumps it through the hose and back into the pool. Experiment with the flow rate to get the desired temperature rise. Before you buy a pump, you could feed the hose from your water faucet and catch the flow in a bucket to measure the flow rate after you have regulated it to get the desired temperature rise. This is not very critical, since it will still heat the water regardless of the flow rate. It will either heat a low flow rate very hot or a high flow rate a little bit. Either way, the same total amount of heat will be put into the pool. The circulating pump should be allowed to run during all the daylight hours and turned off at night. Post by Joe H |
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