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Overunity Machines Forum



Building a Solar Electric Houseboat

Started by gotoluc, May 11, 2013, 09:20:03 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 8 Guests are viewing this topic.

tim123

Hi Luc,
  thanks for sharing your build. I'm really impressed with your innovation and craftsmanship.  :)

I have a few questions, I hope you don't mind...

- Have you calculated the heating requirements for the boat on a cold winter day?
   i.e. given the R-values, the surface area, and the inside & outside temps - you can calculate how much heat you'll be losing, and hence how much you need to add...

- How will you be powering and heating the boat during winter? Is there any opportunity to have a wind-generator, for example?

- Have you considered using wave-power at all?
   It's really easy to have a float connected to a (geared) DC generator, and it works at night too.
   Potentially much cheaper than solar.
   Not much use in winter, or on a trailer, though...

:)
Tim

gotoluc

Quote from: tim123 on September 08, 2013, 04:31:33 AM
Hi Luc,
  thanks for sharing your build. I'm really impressed with your innovation and craftsmanship.  :)

I have a few questions, I hope you don't mind...

- Have you calculated the heating requirements for the boat on a cold winter day?
   i.e. given the R-values, the surface area, and the inside & outside temps - you can calculate how much heat you'll be losing, and hence how much you need to add...

- How will you be powering and heating the boat during winter? Is there any opportunity to have a wind-generator, for example?

- Have you considered using wave-power at all?
   It's really easy to have a float connected to a (geared) DC generator, and it works at night too.
   Potentially much cheaper than solar.
   Not much use in winter, or on a trailer, though...

:)
Tim

Hi Tim, thanks for your interest and positive comments.

No, I have not calculated the heating requirements. The internal space is very small, only 8 feet wide x 18 long. Insulation value is very high, R20 in the walls and R40 in the roof and floor. I'm integrating a glycol  radiant floor heating system which will be heated by a small on-demand propane water heater that delivers 14 KW of heat power at 88% efficiency.
I have no worry that the heating system is more than adequate, even a temperatures of -40.

The boat is powered by an electric drive system which will be powered by a 2 KW Solar panels array (above the top deck).  I may use a wind generator in the winter if the panels don't supply enough power, however I doubt that.

Wave power is good if you're in an area with wave action, however, this is not my case, I'm mostly on a river system.

Thanks

Luc

tim123

Hi Luc,
  14Kw eh? That's more than my house! :D

I've done the calcs. I had to use UK metrics, but it looks pretty favourable... I think the values are right, but it's the first time I've done it - so I could have made a mistake. It's not rocket science though...

For living space 8ft x 8ft x 18ft = 2.5 x 2.5 x 5.5m

End walls - 2 x 6.5 m2
Side walls - 2 x 13.75 m2

R-value for 100mm Kingspan (metric) = 4.5 m2 K / W

Assumed temperature difference: 60 Degrees C - (inside +20, outside -40)

AREA x TEMPDIFF / RVAL = WATTS

End walls @ 6.5m2  = 83 Watts x 2
Side walls @ 13.75  = 183 Watts x 2

Total for all walls = 533 Watts

If floor & ceiling have 200mm Kingspan, they both lose 91 Watts

Total Losses = Heating Requirement = 716 Watts

:)
Tim

PS - that's ignoring any insulation afforded by the fiberglass, glue, plywood, wall coverings etc...

gotoluc

Quote from: tim123 on September 10, 2013, 05:01:44 AM
Hi Luc,
  14Kw eh? That's more than my house! :D

I've done the calcs. I had to use UK metrics, but it looks pretty favourable... I think the values are right, but it's the first time I've done it - so I could have made a mistake. It's not rocket science though...

For living space 8ft x 8ft x 18ft = 2.5 x 2.5 x 5.5m

End walls - 2 x 6.5 m2
Side walls - 2 x 13.75 m2

R-value for 100mm Kingspan (metric) = 4.5 m2 K / W

Assumed temperature difference: 60 Degrees C - (inside +20, outside -40)

AREA x TEMPDIFF / RVAL = WATTS

End walls @ 6.5m2  = 83 Watts x 2
Side walls @ 13.75  = 183 Watts x 2

Total for all walls = 533 Watts

If floor & ceiling have 200mm Kingspan, they both lose 91 Watts

Total Losses = Heating Requirement = 716 Watts

:)
Tim

PS - that's ignoring any insulation afforded by the fiberglass, glue, plywood, wall coverings etc...

Thanks Tim for the reply and energy loss calculations.

I know the 14 KW looks high!  I got it from the ebay page of the heater I bought: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Haier-Gas-LPG-Instantaneous-On-Demand-Continous-Flow-Tankless-Water-Heater-/261274268626?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3cd528f3d2

I forgot to mention is my ceiling will only be 6-1/2 feet high, but one way or the other the heating requirement looks to be quite low.

One thing I was wondering is how long my propane tank will last. There must be a way to convert propane to Watts output by its weight. I was thinking of using a 15 pound tank.

Here are the average monthly temperatures in Ottawa, Canada, in degrees Celsius:

Month              ºC
January           -10
February           -8
March                -2
April                    6
May                   13
June                  18
July                    21
August               19
September        14
October               8
November            1
December           -7

So from June to September we don't need heat but the rest of the 8 months we do. Maybe with the above you can find the average daily Watts needed for those 8 months and from that find how long a 15 pound propane tank will last.

Thanks for your help and sharing

Luc

tim123