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They usually use the same transfer fluid, and although technically you don't *need* an antifreeze with a drain-back most people play it safe. Only difference really is that when the pump isn't running the fluid isn't in the collector and 'drains back' into a small cylinder or tank.you will either have a drain back system of which I know nothing about
Kimbo
Thanks for your reply.
The system seems to have German parts as there are German words on the foam box around the pump. A 15 ml pipe coming up to the loft from the HW tank goes to a graduated sight glass below the Wilo pump. Flow Gauge
The sight glass seems to have some brown gunge in it. Probably needs flushing and refilling
Next comes a tee to an open ended service valve which is threaded both inside and out at the open end. This should probably be capped off but isn't. Should be capped
The valve is in the closed position of course. Then comes a screwdriver slot of what is probably the service valve for the pump. I noticed that this appears to have graduations around it to indicate the degree to which it is open. The slot is at 45 deg. to the vertical. Flow restrictor Should be set as per collector panel instructions ie 6l per sec.
Above the pump are the following:- 1) A tee to a stub tube of about 7 ml diameter. Can't guess what purpose this serves. 2) A pressure gauge reading a little below one bar when the pump is NOT running. 3) A 15ml pipe to the solar tubes on the roof. There is also a fitting above the pump from which the following appear:- 1) What I guess to be a pressure relief valve as it has a conical plastic knob on top marked 6 bar. Pressure relief valve
2) A 15 ml open ended pipe which drops into a plastic container. What is this for? Is it part of the pressure relief system? If the pressure exceeds 6bar the glycol is saved in the container for re-use
3) A corrugated flexible tube which terminates in a blue cylinder. Is this to keep the system pressurised? Expansion vessel which takes up the pressure as the temperature rises
and 4) A service valve which is capped off with a screw cap. The middle of the screw cap seems to have a small round knob with a plastic retainer strap on it. I am not sure if the retainer strap is for the screw cap itself and the small round knob in the middle is just to hold the strap or if the small round knob itself is an entry point to the system through the screw cap. Connection points for a solar filling pump
I hope you may be able to recognise what I have described. As I say, there appear to be two service valves with accessible ends, one open ended before the pump and the other which has a screw cap and which may be part of the pressure system.
Any further information you can give me about the servicing I might need and what I might be able to do myself would be very helpful. If the pressure drops much below one bar when the pump is inoperative does this mean a top up is needed?
Obviously that will depend on a number of factors some of which will change on a daily basis. Things like: size of solar array, amount of sunlight you receive, whether you use your hot water during the day, whether your boiler comes on before the solar has had a chance to heat up your water. If you use the most hot water first thing in the morning then the best way to get more out of your solar system is to change your habits.The electricity cost is easily calculated but I have no idea how much heat is transferred to the HW system and the gas units thereby saved.
Reply to the thread, titled "Solar water heating - Domestic" which is posted in Bathroom Advice on Plumbers Forums.
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