The Solar Shed -- Using Solar
Collectors Mounted on an Outbuilding for House Heating
NEW!
Our Solar Shed Project in Mother Earth News The Dec 2007 Mother Earth News has a full article on the Solar Shed solar heating system.
The article features some great new illustrations and diagrams, and includes full how-to build information.
The article is currently
available at the Mother Earth News Website, and the print copy is "on the
newsstands".
The several pages of information below contain quite a lot of additional material that will be helpful if you are building this collector or heat storage tank.
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The 240 square feet of south facing collectors on the new garden shed. The shed measures 24 ft wide by 12 ft deep. A 500 gallon thermal storage tank is positioned just behind the collectors inside the shed. The pipes that carry heat to the house are in a trench that takes off toward the house, which is 100 ft to the left.
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Update: October 20, 2018
Have not done an update for some time, so here is the latest...The system is still working fine. All of the original components (pumps, controller, ...) are still working with no failures or replacements. The system has not required any repairs over its 12 year life so far. In some very small areas, the inner layer of the double wall polycarbnate glazing shows some degradation due to overheating, but only in some very limited areas with no real impact on performance. This glazing issue has to do with using both a collector absorber with a selective coating in combination with the double glazing causing the collectors to run very hot when the sun is on them and water is not flowing through them. If I were doing the collector again, I'd use the twin wall polycarbonate glazing along with an absorber that is just painted black (no selective coating -- this is an easy DIY approach and has good performance) similar to the collector on the $2K solar water/space heating system.
The system has operated for 11 winters. With a saving of about 340 gallons of propane per year at a nominal $2 llal on, the savings are $7500 compared to an initial cost of materials of about $4200. So, it has paid back nearly twice its cost of materials so far and I expect it to run for many more years. The yearly return on the invested $4200 is about 18%. The cumulative reduction in CO2 emissions is about 56,000 lbs.
I did not operate the system through the winter of 2017. The reason has to do with having some trouble getting the system started in the fall, being away from the house for a lot of the winter, and some lazyness on my part.
Update: December 9, 2013 --
For the first time since the system was built in 2006, we had a small freeze problem. One of the two pipes going from the tank to the house froze in the area right next to the tank. This section of pipe right next to the tank is exposed to outside temperatures. I took pains to insulate it well and try to arrange things so that a little heat from the tank got to the pipes, but I guess the full week of temperatures down to -20F were a little too much for it.
I easily got the pipe thawed by putting a heater tape in the insulated cavity near the pipe. There was no freeze damage to any of the pipes, and the system was up and running again with only half a day lost. The heater tape is thermostatically controlled and runs very little to keep the pipe area around the pipe above freezing -- even in this bitter cold weather, it only takes an average power draw of about 5 watts to keep the area above freezing, but I will probably see if I can do a better job on the insulation and eliminate the heater tape.
The pipe lines from the shed to the house are buried 4 ft down, so freezing is not an issue except where the pipe comes up next to the tank.The collector loop operated through this long spell of cold weather with no problems.
Otherwise, the system startup in the Fall with no problems and has been run with no incidents or problems.
Update: October 31, 2011 -- Happy Halloween!
Not much new to report the last couple years. The system started up fine -- basically just flip a couple switches.
I did loose a glazing panel in a big windstorm. This was carelessness on my part as I had taken off one of the glazing cap strips to place a logging sensor under the glazing and I decided to replace some of the screws with plastic coated deck screws -- while I was waiting to pick those up in town, I just had the cap strip loosely secured, and then the windstorm came.
I found the twinwall glazing panel a quarter mile away in the neighbors field. It had a couple not bad scratches on it, but otherwise fine. I reinstalled it. Polycarbonate is pretty tough!
I do strongly recommend that people thinking about this project read through this newer space heating project -- its very thoroughly documented and has a few lessons learned over the past few years by me and others.Update: October 3, 2009 --System startup for the 2009 - 2010 heating season.
I started up the Solar Shed yesterday after the summer shutdown.
I started up just fine -- no hitches, took 2 minutes.
I started it just before noon, and the tank went from 60F to 110F by the end of the day.
Likewise, the startup of the radiant floor heating system that draws hot water from the storage tank and pumps it through the radiant floor was also uneventful.
At 4:30 pm, Oct 3, the tank is at 129F, and provided some heat last night and all day today -- its been cold the last couple days with some snow, so the system is doing some work even at this early date.
I put these little updates in just to reassure people that the system is alive and well -- if there are problems with it over time, I will post them -- honest :)Updated: 1/15/07 -- Added the "Heat Distribution to House" and "Performance" sections, and a few new comments at the end of the "Shed and Collector", "The Trench", and the "Storage Tank" sections.
Finished the first few radiant floor loops for the house, and started using heat from the system on 1/12/07.
Project Directory:
Instead of installing solar collectors on the south roof of the house, the collectors are installed on a new garden shed that was designed for them. The new shed thus provides the following functions: 1) holds garden equipment, 2) provides a good space for solar collectors (pointed in the right direction for good collection), and 3) provides space for a large water tank to store heat. Heated water from the storage tank in the garden shed is circulated to the house as needed for space heating.
I should mention that we live in SW Montana at 46 degrees north latitude. Winters are chilly -- 8000 degree-days and down to -30F once in a great while -- with typical mid-winter highs in the 30F's. But, a fair number of sunny days that are a pleasant indeed.
South of shed wall with integrated solar water heating collectors being built.
The assembled absorber plates were purchased, and the collector
housing and glazing were site built, and integrated with the wall.
The combination Garden Shed and Solar Collector System. The South wall/roof slopes at 70 degrees, and has
six 4ft by 10ft solar thermal collectors.
The collectors are integrated with the south face of the shed -- the shed and the collectors share elements such that each benefits from the other. For example, the collector glazing eliminates the need for siding and roofing on the south side of the shed, and the collector support structure is one in the same with the south wall of the shed.
These are my initial thoughts on the pluses and minus of this type of system (feedback welcome):
Pro
Locating the solar collectors on a new outbuilding allows you the freedom to get the orientation, location and tilt of the collectors right for efficient collection (in contrast to trying to find a place on the house that has the space and orientation to work).
The scheme could be used in a wide variety of retrofit situations without having to deal with the peculiarities of each individual house. Basically it offers a simple, plug-in, modular solution to provide supplemental solar heating to any house that has a sunny spot in the yard. Might also be less likely to run afoul of Home Owner Association rules.
You get the combined functionality of a storage shed (or playhouse, studio, shop,...) and solar collection all in one package.
The shed and the collectors can share structural elements, which has the effect of saving materials and money on both.
The collector area is limited only by the size of your yard and the size of your wallet, not by how much space you can find to mount collectors on the house.
The collectors are located on the ground where they are easier to build and maintain, thus reducing the number of trips to the Emergency Room.
During the winter, you get a beneficial reflection from the snow on the ground to the south of the collectors which provides a "free" increase in collected solar energy. Perhaps a 15% bonus?
You don't have to figure out a place to put a large heat storage tank in the house.
The system is very simple -- no heat exchangers, antifreeze, expansion tanks, air purge valves, ...
The storage tank can be of any size, and is not constrained by having to fit in the house space, or through the crawl space access hatch, and does not take up space in the house.
The storage tank is cheap -- it is
essentially an insulated plywood box lined with insulation and an EPDM
membrane (but it does have to be built carefully).
A simple scheme can be used to prevent the collectors from overheating during summer.
You can build that outdoor shop (studio, ...) you have always wanted, and tell your spouse its all about lowering your heat bill with good clean solar energy.
Con
You have to provide a well
insulated "pipeline" from the shed collectors to the house. This is some
work to construct, a source of some expense and heat loss.
Takes up space in your yard (on the
other hand, it leaves you less to mow).
The storage tank must be well insulated, since it lives in a cold environment, and losses from the tank don't help to heat the house as they would if the tank were inside the heated area. This is not technically difficult, it just costs more for the insulation.
Use the links in the Directory above to see more detail on the various components.
Gary Updated 10/25/06, October 31, 2011