Thermomax ruggedness [RE-wrenches]

Dana Orzel dana at solarwork.com
Fri Aug 15 22:49:20 PDT 2003


Gary - I have seen 190 water temp returning to the tank on a hazy morning in
December with exterior temperatures at the 5 deg. F mark. Tank temp. was 140
deg. F. They almost work too well at 6,000 to 7,000 ft. and higher
elevations. I think that they are better suited for low elevation, costal,
or higher temp. applications. They kick the BTU's out in marginal
situations, i.e.; cold, cloudy. They really go in full sun too. Though
almost too much if the flow is compromised. I have switched to flat plate
collectors [Heliodyne]. They do not clear snow well at all, as they hold
snow due to the vacuum in the tube not transferring heat.
Energetically - Dana

Responsible Technologies for Responsible People.
Great Solar Works, Inc.
dana at solarwork.com - 970.626.5253
Ridgway, CO, USA
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Gary Higbee" <gary at windstreamsolar.com>
To: <RE-wrenches at topica.com>
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2003 9:57 PM
Subject: Re: Thermomax ruggedness [RE-wrenches]


> Larry,
>
> Wow, I'm impressed. This has been a nagging question for me for some time,
> and it's great to get some feedback regarding the Thermomax tubes. I've
> always known that sphere's/cylinders were very strong, but just what are
> these things made of--Kryptonite somethingerather? I've heard that these
> tubes can extract significant heat in cloudy weather, too, though I know
> that those of you on the East side of the big hills don't see much of
that!
>
> Gary
>
> From: "larry" <larry at h2nation.com>
> Subject: Re: Thermomax ruggedness [RE-wrenches]
>
>
> > I have one customer with a 60 tube setup that is inclined about 35
degrees
> > since they wanted most of the heat in the summer.
> >
> > About 2 months ago we experienced hail of at least 1" with very high
winds
> > and I thought for sure they would be toast.
> >
> > No damage at all. I saw in a video a demo where two fairly heftey guys
> stood
> > on a Thermomax tube set between two concrete blocks with no breakage. I
> know
> > that a high impact is more important but this was impressive.
> >
> > Larry Elliott
>
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