• Home

The Solar DIY Blog

Learn More Pay Less

Feed on
Posts
Comments
« Payback Time for A Solar Panel System
DESIGN SQUAD @ Maker Faire | Solar Jewelry | PBS »

SOLAR HOT WATER SHOWER DIY BLACK WATER HOSE PART 1

Sep 2nd, 2008 by Mr.Burton

Part 1 of a 2 part series showing how to install a cheap cost effective solar hot water heater.http://greenpowerscience.com/

Duration : 0:6:55


Technorati Tags: day, environment, gardening, GIRL, global, green, home, hot, power, Science, SHOWER, Solar, sun, warming, water

Tags: day, environment, gardening, GIRL, global, green, home, hot, power, Science, SHOWER, Solar, sun, warming, water

Posted in solar diy

25 Responses to “SOLAR HOT WATER SHOWER DIY BLACK WATER HOSE PART 1”

  1. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm1gumpdy

    CLIMB UP ON TOP OF …
    CLIMB UP ON TOP OF THE CARPORT!

  2. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm2dbdraggin

    Next time, or for …
    Next time, or for anyone else reading this, you can heat up the tubing with a blowtorch when coupling the two hoses together. The connector will slide right in with much much less effort and the hose clamp will still hold the tube more than tight enough.

    Awesome vid! any results on what this saved you on your heating bill?

  3. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm3r2d4cp3o

    Tip: When put the …
    Tip: When put the white pipe in to act as a connector, pound in one side as you did, but tighten the hose clamp around it before you slide the second hose on. This way you make sure you are not just shoving most of it up the original first hose as you are sliding the second hose on.

  4. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm4beanbag1985

    this is way too …
    this is way too hard for any body to do man

  5. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm51ToNJaB

    haha! The trick is, …
    haha! The trick is, you have to be smarter than a hose. :)

  6. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm6rehabforegosband

    ITS CALLED AN OUT …
    ITS CALLED AN OUT TAKE FOR A REASON!~~~

  7. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm7cdltpx

    Man if my wife were …
    Man if my wife were as beautiful as yours I would need help brushing my teeth if she would help.
    Glad you show the way things don’t work too. The guy from Houston was right the sun tears up plastic it has to be able to take sunlight or you will be out all that tubing you could just paint it that would keep the uv rays off of your tubing and still heat your water. Try to use a flat black ask questions at hardware store tell them you are trying to make plastic last longer.

  8. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm8RHEAD100

    I did this same …
    I did this same thing in Mexico for my in-laws. Glade you said how much easyer it is to use 1/2 inch. And, True, it does hold less water. BUT;; The water heats up faster. 600 feet and it runs all day long and you DON”T run out of hot water. In fact,,, on a real sunny day. You will need to add a little cold or it will blister you. It has lasted 3 years and still going strong.
    Thanks for the video. Great job.

  9. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm9longworthbob

    Like to know how …
    Like to know how this system holds up. Did something similar about 30 years ago using black irrigation tubing on the roof to heat pool water. It only took one hot Houston summer to destroy that poly tubing. Maybe yours is a heavier gauge? Maybe that black hose is heavy enough? Be interesting to see.

  10. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm10dtsimoncic

    Hi, nice video. …
    Hi, nice video. Have you considered that installing the water tube linearly, instead of in a loop, aligned on the corrugated panel roof you could get more solar radiation on the tube surface facing down by reflection from the metal?

  11. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm11GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    That sounds neat. …
    That sounds neat. Is it for lighting only or water too. Also any websites.

  12. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm12dudewhatthehellman

    hey an idea: in …
    hey an idea: in brazil some guy came up with the idea of putting a 2litre water bottle in a hole on the roof (half inside, half out), it refracts sunlight and its as powerful as a 60 watt bulb apparently, with some black tape to protect the cap… try it out!!

  13. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm13GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    Chemical leeching …
    Chemical leeching sadly is unavoidable regardless of what your choice is. …….. And one final note. Several people have emailed about using car radiators for a hot water system. Bad idea, they have an EXTREME lead hazard. Please let me know if you find any info to add to this, it brings up an interesting topic.

  14. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm14GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    The only 2 forms of …
    The only 2 forms of tubing or water containers that do not leech are glass and pure stainless steel. Ironically many people have traded their plastic bottles in for aluminum. Also consider most bottled water is not transported in cooled trucks. One water/plumbing training video stated ” your chemical exposure is 100x greater by drinking hot tea or coffee in a Styrofoam cup or plastic cup than sitting in a hot tub for 8 hours. I would think solar showers would be much less than a hot tub.

  15. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm15GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    Leeched chemicals …
    Leeched chemicals are usually not a concern for exterior exposure. Far more concern for internal (do not drink hot water).

    Consider that most hot tub pipe tubing is know to leech. The majority of drinking water bottles. Another factor is water purity. RO or distilled water leech far more organic and inorganic compounds than regular city or well water. This is why whole house systems are rare and require special pipe.

  16. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm16GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    Cool;-) Re.: Denise …
    Cool;-) Re.: Denise…

    Leeching – (NEVER DRINK HOT WATER REGARDLESS OF WHAT PIPE YOU HAVE IN YOUR HOUSE) there are concerns with any pipe, heated or not, regardless of Galvanized even cpvc or copper tubing, the liners of many water tanks leech. Drinking water bottles etc. The key to avoiding issues is A:not drinking hot water. B:avoid excessive steamy showers. C:not heating water above 180f. We did have our hot water tested and it was high in iron, we have well water. Cold water has the same.

  17. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm17damianpaonejazz

    Okay first of all …
    Okay first of all great videos. Second, Denise is seriously hot, you lucky man. Thirdly, I’d like to know if you tested the hot water that you produced. There is a serious risk of toxic leeching into liquids when you heat rubber/plastic. If you did do a complete test I’d like to know the results.

    Great stuff.

  18. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm18JULYINJULY

    I thought it added …
    I thought it added tons humor. Like active bloopers. I like to see the process of good videos. People assume these Youtube people just setup a camera and go I can see there is a lot more to it.

  19. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm19edwardfufu

    Appreciate the …
    Appreciate the information. I must say though, all of the starts and stops are really annoying.

  20. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm20americafirst101

    lol after all that …
    lol after all that work he needs a shower

  21. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm21GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    Thank You!!!
    Thank You!!!

  22. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm22sonofhendrix

    Keep up the …
    Keep up the excellent work!

  23. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm23mylarjorgen

    Superb vid dude. I …
    Superb vid dude. I did the same thing for a solar showerin France when i was on a WWOOF organic farm (google WWOOF) and learned that the trick is to use a blow-torch to gently heat and train your hose into going where you want it to (avoid sharp corners though) then tie it on a light frame, as you did, to get it up there.

  24. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm24GREENPOWERSCIENCE

    :-)
    :-)

  25. on 02 Sep 2008 at 5:42 pm25MrfixitRick

    Funny!! I love the …
    Funny!! I love the off-takes; It’s makes it way more interesting to see the process of making a movie.

    “Traffic all of a sudden?!” haha!

  • Reduce The Cost Of Solar


  • Categories

    • solar cost
    • solar diy
    • solar do it yourself
    • solar panels cost
    • Uncategorized
Theme by